Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

BMC starts to shut down some Covid Care Centres

- Rupsa Chakrabort­y rupsa.chakrabort­y@htlive.com

MUMBAI: With fewer than 1,000 new Covid-19 cases reported on an average in the city, the Brihanmumb­ai Municipal Corporatio­n (BMC) is shutting down some Covid Care Centres (CCCS).

At present, Mumbai has 332 CCCS for high-risk contacts, with a bed capacity of more than 48,000. There are 173 CCCS for positive asymptomat­ic patients, with over 23,000 beds. As the pandemic curve has flattened in Mumbai, almost 70% CCCS are now empty. Consequent­ly, BMC is gradually handing these rented lodges, schools, auditorium­s and hotels back to owners. Medical equipment from the CCCS, like oximeters, glucometer­s, oxygen cylinders and blood pressure monitors, will later be used in secondary healthcare facilities.

“At present, we aren’t handing over all the equipment. We have to remain prepared in case Mumbai is hit with a second wave of Covid-19. Annually, peripheral hospitals, dispensari­es and health posts have their own demand for medical devices. So these equipment will be sent to these facilities for future usage,” said additional municipal commission­er Suresh Kakani.

BMC runs 16 peripheral hospitals, 175 municipal dispensari­es, 29 maternity homes with over 200 health posts across the city.

CCCS were set up in all civic wards by BMC, in March, to quarantine high-risk contacts and asymptomat­ic patients. By June, BMC was conducting around 4,500 reverse transcript­ion polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) tests every day and an average of 1,100 new Covid-19 cases were reported daily. Since the inclusion of rapid antigen tests, daily average testing is over 7,000 per day, with more than 10,000 tests being conducted on some days. Despite the increased testing, the daily average caseload for Covid-19 has remained below 1,000 in the city. The positivity rate has come down from 22% in July to 19.51% in August.

The civic body has spent around ₹850 crore on health infrastruc­ture during the pandemic, of which ₹130 crore was spent on

STATE GOVT COMPENSATI­ON

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