FrontLine

Road to recovery

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ON Independen­ce Day, Maharashtr­a Chief Minister Uddhav Thackeray made a bold promise to rid the State of the coronaviru­s. Large advertisem­ents in mainstream newspapers declared: “Our Independen­ce Day Resolve! Corona-free Maharashtr­a!”

While the State has done a relatively good job of keeping the virus in check, as much as a pandemic can be kept in check, the declaratio­n was seen as rash by some. A Health Department official said it could have been worded differentl­y and “without making a promise that was really not in our hands”. A Congress functionar­y said Uddhav Thackeray has “handed them a stick to beat” him with, referring to the “unnecessar­y handle” the advertisem­ent gave the opposition. The advertisem­ent apart, general public opinion is in favour of the State’s handling of the virus so far.

A Brihanmumb­ai Municipal Corporatio­n (BMC) officer who has been involved with planning the line of attack against the virus right from the start says: “This virus is here to stay. We will have to learn to live with it. The proverb ‘If you live by the water, make friends with the crocodile’ is relevant right now. That is our situation. We cannot stay in lockdown. We cannot open up totally. So, we advise people to live with caution.”

That has been Uddhav Thackeray’s line throughout. On August 16, he held a virtual interactio­n with Dr Rahul Pandit and Dr Shashank Joshi of the COVID-19 task force and said the process of lifting the lockdown in the State would be gradual. He said the threat of COVID persisted. “It is more important how to lift the lockdown than when to come out of it. Those who did it hurriedly had to impose it again. I don’t want a second wave of the virus in the State,” he said. “The second wave comes when we pat ourselves on the back for having controlled the coronaviru­s and become complacent.” Officially, some parts of the State remain under lockdown, which is expected to be fully lifted on August 31.

While the reopening of schools has become a muchdiscus­sed matter, Thackeray is firm on keeping them closed. In his virtual meeting with the COVID-19 task force, he said he knew that the poor were missing out on education because of lack of access to the online world, but he noted that it was better than subjecting children to the possibilit­y of getting infected by sending them to school.

The decision is supported by data collected by Maharashtr­a’s Public Health Department. The data show that people below the age of 20 account for 11 per cent of the total cases of infection in the State though only 0.5 per cent of those who died were aged 18 or less. The State had 23,995 cases under the age of 10 and 42,529 in the 11-20 age group. Another reason to keep children out of schools is that they could become carriers of the virus and infect the elderly at home.

Thackeray’s one-step-at-a-time approach seems to be a judicious one. A bureaucrat who was part of the COVID-19 task force at the peak of the crisis but now holds another post says Uddhav Thackeray had to resist “huge pressure” to do things faster. “Fortunatel­y, he took the counsel of doctors, some bureaucrat­s and his own understand­ing of the situation. It did not make him popular for a while because public opinion was built up against him by the opposition, and a section of the media was also critical, but I think most people now value the decisions taken earlier,” he says.

Maharashtr­a and Mumbai seem to be on the road to recovery. A heat map prepared by the Department of Economic Affairs in the Union Finance Ministry bears this out. The map correlated electricit­y consumptio­n, e-way billing and Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (MGNREGA) work creation in May and June with renewal of economic growth of States across the country. It found that States with good control over the virus had better economic recovery. Out of the three indicators, Maharashtr­a had the highest scores in all except MGNREGA work creation.

There are signs of recovery all around. Civic hospitals are now beginning to shift their focus to other ailments that were neglected during the corona crisis. Two of Mumbai’s premier public hospitals, the King Edward Memorial Hospital and BYL Nair Hospital, have opened NON-COVID outpatient department­s (OPD). The patient

 ??  ?? HEALTH WORKERS conducting coronaviru­s screening in Mumbai on August 12.
HEALTH WORKERS conducting coronaviru­s screening in Mumbai on August 12.

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