Jamaica Gleaner

Dramatic fall in virus cases leaves experts stumped

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NEW DELHI (AP):

WHEN THE coronaviru­s pandemic took hold in India, there were fears it would sink the fragile health system of the world’s second-most populous country. Infections climbed dramatical­ly for months and at one point India looked like it might overtake the United States as the country with the highest case toll.

But infections began to plummet in September, and now the country is reporting about 11,000 new cases a day, compared to a peak of nearly 100,000, leaving experts perplexed.

They have suggested many possible explanatio­ns for the sudden drop – seen in almost every region – including that some areas of the country may have reached herd immunity or that Indians may have some preexistin­g protection from the virus.

The Indian government has also partly attributed the dip in cases to mask-wearing, which is mandatory in public in India and violations draw hefty fines in some cities. But experts have noted the situation is more complicate­d since the decline is uniform even though mask compliance is flagging in some areas.

INDIA’S INTRIGUING PUZZLE

It’s more than just an intriguing puzzle; determinin­g what’s behind the drop in infections could help authoritie­s control the virus in the country, which has reported nearly 11 million cases and over 155,000 deaths. Some 2.4 million people have died worldwide.

“If we don’t know the reason, you could unknowingl­y be doing things that could lead to a flare-up,” said Dr Shahid Jameel, who studies viruses at India’s Ashoka University.

India, like other countries, misses many infections, and there are questions about how it’s counting virus deaths. But the strain on the country’s hospitals has also declined in recent weeks, a further indication the virus’ spread is slowing. When recorded cases crossed nine million in November, official figures showed nearly 90 per cent of all critical care beds with ventilator­s in New Delhi were full. On Thursday, 16 per cent of these beds were occupied.

That success can’t be attributed to vaccinatio­ns since India only began administer­ing shots in January – but as more people get a vaccine, the outlook should look even better, though experts are also concerned about variants identified in many countries that appear to be more contagious and render some treatments and vaccines less effective.

 ?? AP ?? People wait outside a health centre to get tested for COVID-19 in New Delhi, India, on February 11.
AP People wait outside a health centre to get tested for COVID-19 in New Delhi, India, on February 11.

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