FrontLine

SEESAW BATTLE

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While Maharashtr­a and Delhi appear to have contained the pandemic, there are fears that the virus will gain the upper hand in the southern States. In Bihar and Madhya Pradesh, people’s and the authoritie­s’ attention has shifted to politics. A round-up from the battlegrou­nds.

flying kites and socialisin­g with family and friends.

But Delhi should not get complacent, warned Dr Srinivas Rajkumar T of the All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) in Delhi. “We are in a better situation than before, since mid-july. Now there are around 1,000 cases consistent­ly every day. This will continue. But infection will spread through new demographi­c shifts, when people go to office and malls or resume social activities, or when the elderly get exposed, which will lead to isolated spikes,” he told Frontline.

The AIIMS administra­tion had sent the senior resid

ent doctor in the department of psychiatry a show-cause notice after he criticised in a tweet the substandar­d quality of the personal protective equipment (PPE) provided to AIIMS health care workers. “If you can prove my tweet wrong, I will accept I am wrong, but it has been two months and there has been no response from the hospital,” Dr Srinivas said.

Around 200 doctors, nurses, guards and sanitation workers at the AIIMS had tested positive for COVID-19, he said. While the quality of the masks and PPES had improved incrementa­lly after the staff went public with the shortcomin­gs, there was still no concrete change in the way the outpatient department or other department­s of the hospital functioned, he said.

In June, the Delhi government predicted that coronaviru­s cases in Delhi would touch 5.5 lakh by July end. Deputy Chief Minister Manish Sisodia had warned that the city would need 80,000 hospital beds to accommodat­e all the patients. But the prediction went wrong.

‘A LONG WAY TO GO’

By August 17, Delhi recorded a total of 1,52,580 cases. Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal said the COVID situation in Delhi was much better now, but there was still a long way to go. Delivering the Independen­ce Day speech at the Delhi Secretaria­t, he attributed the decreasing COVID numbers to the Central government and nongovernm­ental organisati­ons (NGOS) and thanked them for their collective efforts.

In a competitiv­e bid to politicise the pandemic, both the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP), which rules Delhi, and the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), which holds power at the Centre, touted the “Delhi model” as exemplary and took credit for it. Prime Minister Narendra Modi suggested that other States follow the “Delhi model” in the fight against the virus.

In June, as the numbers in the capital rose at an alarming rate, Union Home Minister Amit Shah chaired a meeting with Delhi government representa­tives and the Lieutenant Governor to chalk out a plan to contain the pandemic. Shortly after the meeting, Delhi’s Health Minister Satyender Jain tested positive for COVID-19 and over a month later Amit Shah, too, tested positive.

After the first COVID case was detected in Delhi in March, it emerged as a national hotspot. June saw the highest surge in COVID-19 cases, with the daily count reaching 4,000 on June 23. The number of casualties was also the highest in that month as was the extent of shortage of hospital beds and testing kits. The unpreceden­ted health crisis forced the BJP and AAP government­s to work together. Since then, the number of new cases has steadily declined and remained below 1,500 in the past month. Health care workers said Delhi managed to bring down the number of daily infections even if it had not yet tamed the virus.

Delhi’s COVID-19 graph see-sawed in mid-august after dipping consistent­ly for a month. But Kejriwal maintained that the positivity rate and the death rate had decreased in Delhi even as the recovery rate increased. By August 16, the recovery rate was 90 per cent, which the government iterated to prove the improvemen­t in conditions.

However, the recovery rate was not a good measure of infection spread as it was bound to go up as a function of time and gave a false sense of improvemen­t, said Dr Srinivas. While the infection rate seemed to have fallen in Delhi, the actual numbers were far higher than what was recorded, not because of the failure of the government or science but because of people’s behaviour, he said. Only people with serious illnesses were going to hospitals. Asymptomat­ic patients or the ones with mild symptoms stayed at home, he said.

Besides, antigen tests had largely replaced RT-PCR (reverse transcript­ion-polymerase chain reaction) tests, despite the Delhi High Court stating that antigen tests should supplement and not substitute RT-PCR tests as they were more reliable. Not everyone had an antibody response, so sometimes the infection could get missed in an antigen test, said Dr Srinivas. Of 100 infected persons, only 60-80 per cent would have an antibody response, he explained. Until mid-august, as many as 13,02,120 tests had been conducted in Delhi.

The total number of containmen­t zones in Delhi until August 15 stood at 538. On July 27, the number was 715, but in just four days the zones were scaled down to 496 after Kejriwal expressed concern over the large number of zones. He hedged his claims over the improving situation and advised people to remain vigilant as the coronaviru­s was unpredicta­ble and there was considerab­le uncertaint­y over what might happen.

“If the situation goes out of control again, the Delhi government is fully prepared to deal with it,” he said while inaugurati­ng a 200-bed hospital for COVID pa

 ??  ?? CHIEF MINISTER ARVIND KEJRIWAL (right) along with Health Minister Satyendra Jain (left) inaugurati­ng a 200-bed COVID hospital at Ambedkar Nagar in New Delhi on August 9.
CHIEF MINISTER ARVIND KEJRIWAL (right) along with Health Minister Satyendra Jain (left) inaugurati­ng a 200-bed COVID hospital at Ambedkar Nagar in New Delhi on August 9.
 ??  ?? MIGRANT LABOURERS returning to Delhi for work queue up to register for COVID-19 test in New Delhi on August 18.
MIGRANT LABOURERS returning to Delhi for work queue up to register for COVID-19 test in New Delhi on August 18.

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