Hindustan Times (East UP)

Positivity rates at two pvt labs 450 times lower than average during Kumbh

- Shiv Sunny and Sandeep Rawat letters@hindustant­imes.com AFP

HARIDWAR : Two private labs in the dock for allegedly conducting fake Covid-19 antigen tests during the Mahakumbh in April reported positivity rates of 0.03% during the holy event, roughly 450 times lower than average positivity rate in Uttarakhan­d at the time, official data accessed by HT showed on Tuesday.

HARIDWAR: Two private labs in the dock for allegedly conducting fake Covid-19 antigen tests during the Mahakumbh in April reported positivity rates of 0.03% during the holy event, roughly 450 times lower than average positivity rate in Uttarakhan­d at the time, official data accessed by HT showed on Tuesday.

The data showed that apart from the two facilities – Delhibased Lalchandan­i Labs and Hisar-based Nalwa Labs – named in the FIR last week, nine labs also reported low positivity rates. Some of these labs had positivity rates of 0.064%, 0.087% and at least six reported less than 1%, prompting authoritie­s to say that the probe will likely be expanded to look at these nine facilities.

In all, 11 labs were contracted by the mela authoritie­s to conduct Covid-19 tests during Kumbh but only two were named in police complaints. Positivity rates are a ratio of the number of Covid-positive results to number of tests conducted, and are a measure of disease outbreak severity in an area.

Data from the mela administra­tion showed that the 11 labs carried out 207,000 antigen tests between April 1 and 30 and reported an overall positivity rate of 0.49%.

For reverse transcript­ion polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) tests – considered the gold standard of Covid-19 testing and more reliable than rapid tests – the labs carried out 44,278 tests and reported a positivity rate of 2.82%.

In all, private labs carried out 251,000 Covid-19 tests during the mela and found 2,273 infections at a positivity rate of 0.90%. At the time, the average test positivity rate in Haridwar was 4%, and that of Uttarakhan­d was 13.7%.

Roughly 9.1 million devotees took the holy dip this year and six million of this was in April, coinciding with a devastatin­g surge in infections across the country. Data showed that Nalwa Labs carried out roughly half – 104,000 – of all antigen tests and reported 0.033% positivity. Lalchandan­i Labs carried out 13,992 antigen tests and reported 0.028% positivity.

Haridwar district magistrate C Ravishanka­r, who is monitoring a three-member probe into the allegation­s, said the low numbers should have raised eyebrows. “Prima facie it was suspicious that a single lab carried out over 1 lakh tests in less than a month when other labs were nowhere close,” he said.

When it came to RT-PCR, Nalwa carried out 5,782 tests and detected 29 infected cases, a positivity rate of 0.50%. Lalchandan­i Labs didn’t conduct any RT-PCR tests.

The data pointed out that a number of private labs not named in the FIRs also reported low positivity rates. For example, two labs detected just one positive case throughout the month and reported antigen positivity rates of 0.064% and 0.087%. Roughly 93% of all rapid tests conducted at the mela were done by six labs that reported a combined positivity rate of 0.23%. The highest antigen positivity rate of 12.69%was reported by a Delhi-based lab that carried out 1,426 tests and found 181 infections. Ravishanka­r said, “It could be possible that no one noticed it (the unusually low positivity rate) because we were just coming from a time when cases were still low. Also, antigen tests usually report few positives.” For RT-PCR tests, a Meerut-based lab reported the lowest positivity rate of 0.1% after carrying out 2,894 tests and finding only three infections. Overall, 44,278 RT-PCR tests were carried out by private labs and 1,250 people were found to be positive at a rate of 2.82%.

Allegation­s of fake testing surfaced at the Kumbh last week after a Faridkot resident complained to the authoritie­s that he received a message for collecting his Covid-19 report despite never having been tested. The complaint triggered a probe that unearthed roughly 100,000 fake rapid antigen tests. Three firms – Lalchandan­i Lab, Nalwa Lab and Noida-based private agency Max Corporate Services – were booked last week.

At present, three separate probes are looking at the allegation­s: one by the police, one by the district administra­tion and one by the mela administra­tion.

Police said their investigat­ion – which is currently looking at the two labs -- will expand to probe all tests carried out by private labs. “We are beginning our probe with the two labs mentioned in the FIR, and will expand our investigat­ion to all the private labs,” said Senthil Avoodai Krishnaraj, senior superinten­dent of police (SSP) of Haridwar. Ravishanka­r said that the probe could expand as well. “It could be due to wrong testing methodolog­y or any other errors, but no lab has been given a clean chit,” said the officer.

A mela administra­tion officer, who did not want to be identified, said that errors could be because of the short period in which these testing camps had to be set up.

 ??  ?? A health worker collects sample from a Hindu devotee to test for Covid-19 during Kumbh Mela festival in Haridwar on April 12.
A health worker collects sample from a Hindu devotee to test for Covid-19 during Kumbh Mela festival in Haridwar on April 12.

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