Business Standard

CENTRE: INDIA NOT AT COMMUNITY TRANSMISSI­ON STAGE YET

1st SERO SURVEY: LESS THAN 1% TESTED ARE INFECTED, URBAN SLUMS AT HIGHER RISK LOCKDOWN PREVENTED RAPID SPREAD; SEVERAL IN COUNTRY STILL SUSCEPTIBL­E SECOND PART OF SURVEY WILL STUDY COVID SPREAD IN CONTAINMEN­T ZONES

- RUCHIKA CHITRAVANS­HI

India’s first serologica­l survey to find the presence of Covid-19 antibodies in people has shown prevalence of infection among 0.73 per cent of individual­s tested, with slums facing a much higher risk of spread, the Indian Council of Medical Research said.

While sharing the findings of the first part of the survey conducted in May, ICMR chief Balram Bhargava said the infection in containmen­t zones was found to be high with significan­t variations. The second part of the survey to study the spread of the disease in the containmen­t zones in the hotspot districts was still ongoing, he said.

“Lockdown has been successful in keeping the transmissi­on low and preventing rapid spread… Large proportion of the population is still susceptibl­e,” Bhargava added.

The ICMR chief, while denying that there is community transmissi­on, said: “Even the World Health Organizati­on has not defined community transmissi­on... india is such a large country and the prevalence is less than 1 per cent in small districts... it may be slightly higher in urban sector and containmen­t areas... india is certainly not in community transmissi­on,” Bhargava said. However, to study the spread of the disease, multiple sero surveys will be conducted in states and the Elisa test kit for antibody detection will be made available to states, ICMR chief said.

The first part of the survey was conducted in 83 districts across 28,595 households collecting samples of 26,400 people. The districts were divided into four categories depending on the level of spread of the disease — zero, low, medium, and high incidence. The survey showed that the infection fatality rate was 0.08 per cent and that the risk was 1.09 times higher in urban areas and 1.89 times higher than rural areas in slums. “That the survey has found less than 1 per cent infected is a big achievemen­t... However, this fight will go on for months,” said V K Paul, a member of NITI Aayog and chairman of empowered group 1.

Conducted in the third week of May, the survey presents the situation around April-end, since the Covid-19 antibodies take around two weeks to appear in the body. The survey involves collection of blood samples from a group of people to check them for antibodies. If the test is positive, it shows that the person has been infected in the past.

The first survey was conducted in collaborat­ion with the states, national centre for disease control, and WHO. The total number of Covid-19 cases in India reached 286,579 on Thursday, registerin­g the highest single-day spike of 9,996 cases and also the largest increase in daily number of deaths with 357 fatalities taking the total toll to 8,102.

 ?? PHOTO: PTI ?? A child being screened in Jammu on Thursday, as migrants from Chhattisga­rh gathered for medical certificat­es to return home
PHOTO: PTI A child being screened in Jammu on Thursday, as migrants from Chhattisga­rh gathered for medical certificat­es to return home
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