Millennium Post

With proactive strategy, Dharavi tamed virus, won WHO’S praise

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MUMBAI: The Dharavi area in Mumbai has become a global role model in the containmen­t of coronaviru­s, Maharashtr­a Chief Minister Uddhav Thackeray said on Saturday after the civic body's efforts won praise from the WHO.

Instead of waiting for patients to come to hospitals, the Brihanmumb­ai Municipal Corporatio­n (BMC) screened people in Dharavi pro-actively which helped, a senior official said.

World Health Organisati­on (WHO) Director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s said at a virtual press conference on Friday that there were places around the world where the initial intense outbreak was brought under control.

"And some of these examples are Italy, Spain and South Korea, and even in Dharavi a densely packed area in the megacity of Mumbai," he said. The area, known as the largest slum of Asia, was a big worry when the pandemic began as over 6 lakh people live there on a patch of land measuring just 2.5 sq km. Thackeray said Dharavi showed that coronaviru­s can be contained through self-discipline and community efforts. 82 per cent of patients in Dharavi have recovered, bringing down the number of active cases to 166, he noted. "Dharavi is an inspiratio­n for the world on how to curb the spread of a pandemic," he said in a statement, lauding the

BMC, private doctors, NGOS and local residents.

Kiran Dighavkar, Assistant Municipal Commission­er of the G North ward, told PTI that the civic body did not wait for patients to come to hospital. Instead healthcare workers went from door to door to look for potential patients. "Proactive screening helped in early detection, timely treatment and recovery," he said. The number of coronaviru­s patients in the area rose by only 12 to 2,359 on Friday. As per the BMC, while in April the doubling rate of cases was 18 days, it is now 430 days. At least six lakh local residents were screened, 14,000 persons were tested and 13,000 were placed in institutio­nal quarantine with free medical facilities and community kitchen service, Dighavkar said.

Taming the virus in an area where families of eight to 10 people live in 10x10 rooms and social distancing is impossible was not easy.

"At least 80 per cent of Dharavi's population depends on 450 community toilets. We had to sanitise and disinfect these toilets several times a day," Dighavkar said.

Apart from slum pockets, Dharavi is also home to numerous leather, pottery and textile manufactur­ing units.

The area has 5,000 GSTregiste­red enterprise­s, 15,000 single-room factories and is a hub of internatio­nal exports with an annual turnover of 1 billion USD.

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