Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Chennai widens home quarantine eligibilit­y

- Divya Chandrabab­u

CHENNAI: P Rajan, a 26-year-old supervisor in a cargo company on furlough, begins his day attending a roll call at the corporatio­n ward office at 7.30 am. He then goes around in his twowheeler to the six streets assigned to him in ward no. 76 of Thiru-vi-ka Nagar, one of the most densely populated localities in Chennai which has reported more than 3,981 Covid-19 positive cases and 81 deaths, where he checks on 11 families under home quarantine. He is among the 3,500 young volunteers, contracted since mid-june till September by the Greater Chennai Corporatio­n (GCC) to monitor and support 18 different categories of people under home quarantine.

Volunteers, who range from college students to office-goers are called FOCUS (Friend of Covid Person Under Surveillan­ce).

They form part of a strategy developed by the GCC that is pegged on home quarantini­ng even those who are likely to be infected to prevent the spread of the coronaviru­s disease (Covid-19). Chennai accounts for 66.5% of the total number of Tamil Nadu’s cases, and is among the top five cities in the country in terms of case-load.

This comes at a time when the state placed Chennai, Kancheepur­am, Tiruvallur and Chengalpet -- the worst affected districts -- under complete lockdown till June 30.

Earlier this month, Chennai’s civic body developed 18 categories, comprising mixed groups of people, under their new uniform strategy called home quarantine and isolation monitoring system (HQIMS). These include those awaiting Covid-19 test results, positive patients undergoing home treatment, discharged patients, internatio­nal and domestic passengers coming via flights, trains, road or sea, family and extended contacts, and people with influenza-like illness identified through the 500-odd fever clinics run by the corporatio­n, among others. Most people in these categories are already mandated to be in 14-day isolation, but it has widened the net on who must undergo isolation.

“Home quarantine is the crux in controllin­g an epidemic,” says Dr Prabhdeep Kaur, deputy director, National Institute of Epidemiolo­gy and one of the members of the state appointed medical panel to assist in the government’s Covid-19 management. “If people follow it properly and they are monitored and supported, it can be very effective in reducing transmissi­on.”

Currently 117,000 homes in Chennai are under HQIMS. The cyclical strategy of 14-days of home quarantine makes these numbers dynamic and at any point 250,000 houses out of 1.075 million houses in the city are expected to be under quarantine and volunteers will be scaled up proportion­ately.

This new system was developed to keep up with the evolving situation of the pandemic. “In April, all positive patients were treated at the hospital. The concept of home quarantine for treatment progressed at a later stage,” says the corporatio­n’s deputy commission­er for revenue and finance, Meghanatha­n Reddy who is overseeing this project.

In the early days of the pandemic, larger geographic­al areas were designated as containmen­t zones. This was later limited to rows of streets and then half a street. But the virus continued to spread internally when people interacted inside the quarantine zones or slipped outside. Also when lockdown restrictio­ns eased, officials found it harder to control movement. So barricadin­g specific homes became more effective.

“Every day we get data of 10,000-15,000 people who need to be home quarantine­d under various categories,” Reddy said. “We send that data to the various zones who forward it to the volunteers.”

Each volunteer is assigned anywhere from five to 10 streets for the city’s 200 wards. They are paid Rs 500 a day. The volunteers file details in a booklet which is collected by ward level officers and sent back to the HQIMS desk at the corporatio­n headquarte­rs.

This system is only for those who can effectivel­y isolate themselves at home. For those who don’t have facilities like separate bathrooms for instance, their contacts are taken to quarantine facilities, and those who test positive for the infection are either kept in hospitals, or healthcare centres and Covid care centres, depending on the severity of the symptoms.

“Even if there is 70% accuracy, we are limiting lakhs of people from going out and transmitti­ng the virus,” GCC commission­er G Prakash said about the HQIMS, adding, “Under these categories, we are able to isolate people who are positive, possibly positive and potential carriers.”

 ?? AFP ?? Chennai accounts for 66.5% of all cases in Tamil Nadu. It is among the top five cities in the country in terms of caseload.
AFP Chennai accounts for 66.5% of all cases in Tamil Nadu. It is among the top five cities in the country in terms of caseload.

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