National Post

HAS COVID STARTED TO BURN ITSELF OUT IN INDIA?

- Amy Kazmin in New Delhi

For most of the past 11 months, dr. Sushila Kataria has worked 15 hours a day, seven days a week tending to a surging tide of COVID-19 patients at Medanta, a prominent private hospital on New delhi’s outskirts.

Since the hospital’s first cases — Italian tourists who fell ill in March — Medanta has treated more than 11,000 patients. The COVID caseload peaked in November, with around 450 in-patients, and 50-100 more on a waiting list for beds.

“It was totally overwhelmi­ng,” says Kataria, an infectious disease specialist who leads Medanta’s COVID care. “November was the worst. We could only accommodat­e the number of patients we could discharge. We were managing very, very sick patients in the ward, as there was no room in the ICU.”

but doctors in the New delhi area treating COVID are now getting an unexpected respite. daily new infections in the capital have dropped sharply in recent weeks. Other city hospitals also report numerous empty beds on COVID wards.

“To our relief and surprise, the number of cases have started to come down drasticall­y,” says Kataria.

The trend extends beyond the capital. Nationally, India’s new confirmed coronaviru­s infections have fallen precipitou­sly, from a peak of nearly 100,000 new infections a day in mid-september to an average of 13,000 to 14,000 a day by the end of January. At the same time, health surveys indicate that there could have been much higher public exposure to the virus than was previously realized.

At a time when many other countries are battling second and third waves and alarming new variants of coronaviru­s, the drop in infections raises a tantalizin­g prospect — has the pandemic started to burn itself out in India?

Some doctors and researcher­s are beginning to speculate that India’s crowded cities may be approachin­g the early stages of natural “herd immunity” — even before a vaccine is widely available — causing the spread of the pathogen to abruptly lose steam.

“What we seem to have done is let the virus run its course,” says virologist T Jacob John, a retired professor at Christian Medical College in Vellore in southern Tamil Nadu state. “by not flattening the curve in the beginning, India went through the herd immunity threshold and the epidemic seems to be naturally coming down.”

That in turn is fuelling cautious optimism that India is emerging from under the pandemic’s shadow, allowing it to repair an economy battered by a strict lockdown, subsequent restrictio­ns and public fear.

“I am hopeful the worst is over,” says dr. randeep Guleria, director of the All India Institute of Medical Sciences, and a member of the government’s COVID-19 task force. “In certain areas, like large cities, we may have come close to achieving a good amount of immunity — if not herd immunity, close to it.”

The normally staid reserve bank of India was even more ebullient in a recent bulletin, touting the “increasing probabilit­y” of a stronger-than-expected economic rebound, as the threat of the disease recedes.

“India has ‘bent it like beckham,’” the central bank said of the country’s pandemic curve. “barring the visitation of a second wave, the worst is behind us. The recovery is getting stronger in its traction, and soon the winter of our discontent will be made glorious summer.”

After India detected its first few hundred coronaviru­s infections last March, Prime Minister Narendra Modi imposed a draconian nationwide lockdown, hoping to break the chain of viral transmissi­on.

With public transport suspended for months and consumers limited to buying food, medicine and cleaning products, India’s economy contracted 24 per cent year on year in the April to June quarter.

but lockdown failed to curb the spread in a country where millions live cheekby-jowl, sharing community toilets and water taps, in congested urban slums. From the cities, the pathogen was apparently carried into the hinterland­s, as laid-off migrant workers retreated to their villages.

In all, India has reported more than 10.7 million confirmed coronaviru­s infections, the world’s second-highest tally after the u.s. but health experts agree India’s real case total has been far higher, with most infections never recognized or recorded.

“The reported cases are not even remotely a reflection of true cases — they only reflect people who got tested,” says Vikram Patel, a professor of global health at Harvard Medical School. “For reasons that we don’t fully know, the virus has spread like wildfire in India — more than in any other country in the world.”

In cities like delhi, Mumbai and Pune, seropreval­ence studies — which measure antibodies that suggest a previous exposure to the virus — have indicated that more than half of residents have already been exposed to the virus. One such study in Karnataka state estimated there were 31 million infections there by mid-august, including 44 per cent of the rural population and 54 per cent of the urban population.

yet many people with antibodies have no recollecti­on of being sick at all. “The estimates are that 30 to 40 per cent of individual­s may have had asymptomat­ic or mild infections and not gotten tested,” says dr. Guleria. “Many who had developed mild symptoms may have had COVID-19 without realizing it.”

India has reported more than 154,000 COVID-19 deaths. but like the real infection count, the actual death toll will never be known, as most Indians still die at home, without a cause of death ever formally determined. “We will never know how many people died — no one is counting,” says John.

even taking that into account, some researcher­s say India’s COVID mortality rate has likely not been as high as many other regions.

One reason for that could be the relative youth of the country’s population. Just 6.5 per cent of India’s population is over 65 years old, compared to one-fifth in europe.

Some experts also point to environmen­tal factors that affect immune systems — although the scientists emphasize this hypothesis needs more serious study. “We are seeing a lot less severe disease than the rest of the world, and a lot more asymptomat­ic infections,” says microbiolo­gist Gagandeep Kang, who was involved in India’s drive to produce a coronaviru­s vaccine. “Part of the reason might be prior exposure to lots of other pathogens.”

“We live in an environmen­t where we are exposed to all kinds of pathogens all the time and we learn not to react too much,” she adds.

India does very little viral sequencing that would allow scientists to monitor the particular variant of the disease that is prevalent in the country, something the government is now trying to correct. but Kerala-based health economist rijo John suggests India has so far seen a less virulent strain than elsewhere.

“It’s pretty generally accepted that in India, we have a very mild form of the virus,” he says. “but the future is hard to predict.”

Though the current new daily caseload is certainly an undercount­ing of the true total of new infections — especially in rural areas where testing infrastruc­ture is weaker — experts say there is no doubt that India’s pandemic is on a steep decline.

“It looks like the virus has really spread widely in the country,” says dr. Kang. “Maybe the reason the numbers are crashing is that most people have been infected and infection gives you at least 80 per cent protection for months at a time.”

With public anxiety over the disease now receding, India’s economy is picking up, and the economy is estimated by HSBC to be at 94 per cent of pre-pandemic levels. but the recovery remains uneven, with demand for goods back to pre-pandemic levels, but demand for services is still down 30 per cent.

Life remains severely disrupted in other ways too. Most of the country’s 270 million schoolchil­dren have not set foot in a classroom since March, though some states have allowed a limited number of older students to return. White-collar profession­als have mostly worked from home for 11 months, while many elderly Indians have scarcely stepped out at all, with the likelihood that they remain susceptibl­e to infection.

ramanan Laxminaray­an, director of the Center for disease dynamics, economics & Policy, warns that further moves toward normalcy — such as reopening schools and workplaces — could be accompanie­d by another uptick in cases, as individual­s without immunity are exposed to the virus.

“A lot of this is in the rearview mirror but that doesn’t mean we are done and dusted yet,” he says. “We have an artificial situation in which we’ve reached an equilibriu­m, but if we went back to normal, there is still a lot of room for cases going up.”

India has now begun an ambitious vaccinatio­n campaign, aiming to inoculate 300 million Indians by the end of August, including health-care workers and the elderly. but with just about 3 million vaccinated since the drive started two weeks ago, reaching that goal is likely to be a slow, protracted process.

In the meantime, localized coronaviru­s surges — such as one now under way in Kerala, the southern state that was earlier praised for its successful virus control — are likely. “If you look at the places that did well with control early on, they are the ones (that) have a high level of infection now,” says Kang. “And if a variant comes along that escapes immune responses, then everyone is in play again.”

At Medanta Hospital in delhi, Kataria says the relentless pressure of the past year — coupled with physical isolation from her husband and two teenagers to keep them safe — has taken a toll. “I would tell myself, ‘whatever I could do, I have done’,” she says. “We can’t claim to be gods. We are human at the end of the day.”

Although she is now cautiously optimistic that the worst is over, she warns against complacenc­y, given the potential for new case surges, especially if a new, more virulent variant were to spread in the country. “If the situation continues like this for a month, we can say we have achieved sustained low numbers because of immunity and vaccinatio­n,” she says. “but we have to keep our fingers crossed. These good times may not continue forever.”

 ?? SAJJAD HUSSAIN / AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? Pedestrian­s wear face masks last month as a preventive measure against Covid-19 in New delhi.
SAJJAD HUSSAIN / AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES FILES Pedestrian­s wear face masks last month as a preventive measure against Covid-19 in New delhi.
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