Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Covid-19: What you need to know today

- R Sukumar

India will likely cross a total of 200,000 reported deaths on account of the coronaviru­s disease on Tuesday. In the absence of standardis­ed death data — the number of people who can be expected to die in a region in a certain length of time; and ideally, this should be a long period average that takes into account various population metrics — there is no way to accurately arrive at a so-called excess death number for the entire country.

The only way to do this is to assume other parameters; for instance, some models doing the rounds assume the degree of underrepor­ting and estimate the number of deaths. A better approach may be to make two assumption­s: one, the infection fatality rate for Covid-19, the proportion of people dying to those infected; and two, the proportion of cases unreported or undiagnose­d for every recorded Covid-19 case. The second could be one in 10, 15, maybe even 20 or 25; and the first, based on what we know of other viral diseases in general, 0.1% (conservati­vely). I’ll leave the math to readers interested enough to work it out because this is a hypothetic­al exercise, although it is evident from HT’s own ground reporting, and that of other media, that there is a discrepanc­y between the claimed death numbers appearing against each state in the HT dashboard (this is sourced from the state health department­s), and the number of Covid-19 cremations and burials taking place every day.

Most models expect the situation to stabilise by the third week of May, but there’s no telling. The positivity rates of many states are at a level where a sharp fall is next to impossible (and will possibly suggest manipulati­on); and some states (notably Maharashtr­a) saw their positivity rates plateau at a relatively high level during the first wave of the pandemic in India. Given that, it is likely that cases and deaths will continue to rise. Anecdotal evidence suggests that some of the deaths are being caused by factors such as lack of oxygen or ventilator­s, which is only to be expected as the health system across many parts of the country gets overwhelme­d by cases; this also means that once supply and distributi­on of oxygen is enhanced (an effort that is already underway, and is expected to be completed by the end of the week), the number of deaths should start declining. Oxygen has emerged as a key constraint in India’s ability to deal with the second wave — and this is important to remember as the country prepares for the third wave, which will break at some point.

Vaccines hold the key to helping crush the second wave and lower the intensity of the third — but there are a lot of gaps in what we know about their supply and availabili­ty.

There is a complete lack of clarity on the number of vaccine doses that will be available in the domestic market (for the Centre, states, and private buyers) over the rest of the year from the two large domestic manufactur­ers, Serum Institute of India and Bharat Biotech, after these companies meet their contractua­l export commitment­s. There is an equal lack of clarity on the number of Sputnik V doses that will be available (as import at first and from local manufactur­ing subsequent­ly). What is clear, based on the incomplete numbers that are in the public domain, is that India will fall well short of its requiremen­t. Indeed, with the third phase of vaccinatio­n set to start from May 1, there is still no visibility on when the states that have placed orders will start receiving vaccine doses.

We need data on availabili­ty, and timing. And we desperatel­y need a comprehens­ive vaccine strategy that prioritise­s first doses (in the case of Covishield, which accounts for almost 90% of the vaccine doses administer­ed so far) over complete vaccinatio­n so as to protect as many people as possible from the pandemic. If that is done over the next six weeks, India can crush the second wave. And be ready for the third.

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