Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Centre tells all states to follow ‘Agra model’

PLAN Door-to-door surveys, quarantini­ng suspected patients, strict measures in hot spots key

- Hemendra Chaturvedi hemendra.chaturvedi@htlive.com ■

AGRA: A proactive approach in identifyin­g cases, intensive testing, door-to-door surveys and strict quarantine measures helped Agra successful­ly arrest the spread of Covid-19, officials said on Sunday, after the central government instructed states to learn from the containmen­t model followed by the Uttar Pradesh city.

The “Agra model” kicked in early in the Covid-19 outbreak cycle when six patients tested positive on March 3. At the time, the whole country had only 30-odd cases. “We at once started door-to-door surveys and identifica­tion of infected cases and placing them in quarantine. The outcome is that the cases testing positive now are mostly those already in quarantine,” said Prabhu N Singh, Agra district magistrate.

The city administra­tion followed the strategy of drawing up a list of those back from foreign travel and identifyin­g their family and other close contacts. The neighbourh­ood where patients lived were declared hotspots, with a three-km radius around them acting like a containmen­t zone and a five-km radius area as the buffer zone. “Another aspect of the success was in getting the hotspot areas delisted after doorto-door surveys and sanitising the area,” said Singh

AGRA: A proactive approach in identifyin­g cases, intensive testing, door-to-door surveys and strict quarantine measures helped Agra successful­ly arrest the spread of Covid-19, officials said on Sunday, after the central government instructed states to learn from the containmen­t model followed by the Uttar Pradesh city.

The “Agra model” kicked in early in the Covid-19 outbreak cycle when six patients tested positive on March 3. At the time, the whole country had only 30-odd cases. “We at once started door-to-door surveys and identifica­tion of infected cases and placing them in quarantine. The outcome is that the cases testing positive now are mostly those already in quarantine,” said Prabhu N Singh, Agra district magistrate.

The city administra­tion followed the strategy of drawing up a list of those back from foreign travel and identifyin­g their family and other close contacts. The neighbourh­ood where patients lived were declared hotspots, with a three-km radius around them acting like a containmen­t zone and a five-km radius area as the buffer zone.

“Beside this, 10 patients were cured, including the three who were treated at SN Medical College in Agra . Another aspect of the success was in getting the hotspot areas delisted after extensive door-to-door surveys and sanitising the area, with strict measures to avoid movement within hot spot areas,” said Singh.

The Union health ministry was directly involved in drafting and monitoring the measures taken to contain the rising clusters in Agra. The central integrated disease surveillan­ce programme team came to know of the first positive case in the middle of the night, and, soon after, they started drafting a containmen­t strategy. “People at all levels, from the higher authoritie­s to field staff, were involved in containmen­t measures as it was confirmed that we were dealing with India’s first big Covid-19 cluster. The success of containmen­t can solely be attributed to the team effort that went in it,” said a senior health ministry official, requesting anonymity.

A war room was establishe­d in the Agra Smart City office in midMarch, where 7,000 complaints have been heard till date. The identifica­tion and sealing of hotspots under a micro plan was removed after all patients from the area tested negative signifying the patients in that area were cured. Initially, 38 hot spots were identified by Agra administra­tion, of which 10 have been sanitised. Currently, there are 28 hot spots in the city.

“At least 2,000 of health workers are working 24x7 and we have included around 3,000 Asha workers (village volunteers) to improve outreach when door-todoor surveying for identifyin­g suspected cases reached 1.6 lakh houses. We reached one million city residents with 1,248 twomember teams,” said Dr Mukesh Kumar Vats, chief medical officer. About 2,500 people who were symptomati­c, including 36 with a travel history, were tested.

“For adequately follow up, we developed a foolproof quarantine approach. Those found asymptomat­ic were placed in home quarantine while those who were symptomati­c were placed in isolation ward, so we were mostly testing those already in quarantine. We worked on getting clusters contained, sanitized and removed from list of hotspots, which allowed us to focus on new clusters,” said Dr Vats.

By the end of March, Agra had only 12 cases, of which 8 had recovered. But the arrival of 28 people linked to the Tablighi Jamaat event in Delhi, which is India’s biggest hot spot, led to a surge in numbers in April, with half of new cases linked to the Nizamuddin congregati­on. In all, 143 people from the Jamaat and their contacts were tested. “We searched for these Jamaat members and their contacts and extensive work was done in tracing them. This increased the number drasticall­y,” said Dr Vats.

“Agra has already tested 2,144 samples, of which 104 were positive as on Sunday, the day when 12 more cases were found positive, and mainly comprised of staff at a private hospital and their contacts. This hospital alone had 16 cases testing positive of Covid-19 and has turned into major hot spot, our team is planning to take drastic measures,” said the district magistrate.

Despite the success, the challenges are not over. The city now has 104 cases and authoritie­s are struggling to contain the spread at one of the city’s main private hospitals. Moreover, doctors warn that the virus may have spread in the rural areas, cases being reported from Saiyyan, Fatehpur Sikri, Khandoli and Iradat Nagar. “A plan has been created for rural areas where cases have been identified in two categories,migrantswh­oarrived infected, and those living in villages but working in the city, mainly in hospitals, where they got infected,” Dr Vats said.

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