Khaleej Times

Lack of testing kits, protective gear hobbles war on Covid-19

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new delhi — India, like a lot of countries plunged into crisis by the pandemic, is struggling to ramp up testing for the coronaviru­s, but in few places would the odds of containing the disease appear so bleak should domestic transmissi­on start to multiply.

Officials hope to be testing 20,000 people daily by the end of the week, four times the current rate.

Since India’s first case was confirmed on January 30, they have only conducted 90,000 tests, having focused efforts on identifyin­g people who had come in contact with anyone who has tested positive.

The results show 4,281 people are infected, and 109 have died of the respirator­y disease.

Officials believe the three-week nationwide lockdown ordered by Prime Minister Narendra Modi will have slowed the spread of the virus in communitie­s, giving them a chance to catch up in the race to stop a full blown epidemic. “We are increasing our testing capacity progressiv­ely,” said Lav Agarwal, joint secretary in the Indian health ministry leading the effort to tackle the spread of infections. “We should be not be panicking, we should be preparing,” Agarwal said.

“We have followed a pro-active policy from the beginning. Our focus has been on surveillan­ce and contact tracing. Instead of the virus chasing us, we have been chasing the virus.”

Testing had already doubled in the last two days from 5,000 samples a day, another health official said.

“This is expected to reach 20,000 in the next three days and increase further over the next few weeks as per the plan,” the official said.

Worldwide, more than 1.25 million people have been reported infected by Covid-19, and far wealthier countries than India have been fiercely criticised for their slow initial response, particular­ly regarding testing.

Having been chided for a lag in testing, the United States has overtaken China as the country suffering the most infections. The United States has now conducted around a million tests, and 336,000 people have tested positive.

But in a country like India, with 1.3 billion people, hundreds of millions of poor, living in unhygienic and crammed conditions, there is a very real fear that if the testing starts too far behind the curve, the confirmed cases won’t

even account for the tip of the iceberg.

“There is unanimity among epidemiolo­gists, doctors and district-level administra­tors that the need of the hour is aggressive and extensive testing,” said former finance minister P. Chidambara­m and a leader of the opposition Congress party.

Yet, doctors say the campaign for mass screening is handicappe­d by a lack of both testing kits and protective gear for staff carrying out the tests.

Elsewhere in South Asia, the medical infrastruc­ture can be even more inadequate, and authoritie­s are playing catch up as testing kits become available to them. —

We have followed a pro-active policy from the beginning. Our focus has been on surveillan­ce and contact tracing. Instead of the virus chasing us, we have been chasing the virus Lav Agarwal

Joint Secretary, Health Ministry

 ?? PTI ?? doctors check patients outside an isolation ward at a government medical college hospital in Jammu on Monday. —
PTI doctors check patients outside an isolation ward at a government medical college hospital in Jammu on Monday. —

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