Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

PM stresses localised containmen­t, testing

Include door-to-door testing, report data accurately, help rural India with O2: Modi

- HT Correspond­ent letters@hindustant­imes.com

Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Saturday chaired a high-level meeting to review the Covid-19 situation in the country, directing government officials to make a distributi­on plan for oxygen supply to rural areas and scale up health infrastruc­ture to manage the disease burden in those regions.

The Prime Minister asked officials to focus on testing, including door-to-door testing and assist health care workers in rural areas, the Prime Minister’s Office said in a statement. He also stressed that local containmen­t efforts were the “need of the hour”, especially in states where the test-positivity rate – an indication of the spread of the virus within a population – is high.

“PM asked for augmentati­on of healthcare resources in rural areas to focus on door-to-door testing and surveillan­ce. He also spoke about empowering ASHA & Anganwadi workers with all necessary tools,” the statement said.

PM Modi’s directions are significan­t, given that the deadly second wave of infections in the country appears to have affected rural hinterland faster

than it did during the first outbreak last year.

As reported by HT on May 8, during the first wave, urban areas contribute­d a majority of new infections in India every month for five months from March 2020 to July 2020, before rural areas started contributi­ng more new cases. In the second wave, which began in February, this took just two months as rural areas began contributi­ng more cases April onwards.

Experts say the impact of the outbreak could be even deadlier in rural areas, where health care infrastruc­ture is traditiona­lly weaker and fewer medical facilities are available. About 73% of the country’s population also resides in rural districts.

“The Prime Minister directed that a distributi­on plan for ensuring oxygen supply in rural areas should be worked out, including provision of Oxygen Concentrat­ors,” the statement said.

The PM’s meeting was also held just weeks after the national capital plunged into a health care crisis over the supply of oxygen, which is crucial in the treatment of Covid-19 patients. Starting April 22 until the first week of May, hospitals across New Delhi repeatedly made distress calls over dwindling stocks of oxygen, and dozens of patients died as some facilities waited for supplies to be replenishe­d.

The situation in the Capital has now eased but other states are facing a similar issue. At least 75 Covid-19 patients died at a premier hospital in Goa after fluctuatio­n in the supply of medical oxygen this week.

At the meeting that was attended by Niti Aayog member VK Paul, cabinet secretary Rajeev Gauba among other officials, PM Modi also instructed officials to ramp up testing with both RT-PCR and rapid tests, specifical­ly focusing on Covid-19 hot spots. According to the statement, the PM was informed that testing figures have gone up from 5 million per week in early March to around 13 million/week presently.

Separately, the statement said the Prime Minister “took serious note of some reports about ventilator­s lying unutilised” and ordered an immediate audit of installati­on and operation of the life-saving machines that were provided by the central government to states in recent weeks.

The PM’s response likely refers to the spat between the Centre and the Congress-led Punjab government after the Union health ministry dismissed reports suggesting that ventilator­s given to a hospital in Punjab’s Faridkot were lying unused because of technical glitches. The Union health ministry said earlier this month that the reports of faulty ventilator­s were “unfounded”.

Training for properly operating ventilator­s should be provided to health care workers if necessary, PM Modi added.

The Prime Minister also appeared to address concerns regarding allegation­s of states undercount­ing cases and deaths linked to the viral illness.

He “encouraged” government­s to report Covid-19 numbers “transparen­tly without any pressure of high numbers showing adversely on their efforts”.

The move came a day after the Opposition Congress in Gujarat demanded an inquiry into a local media report that said around 61,000 deaths had not been counted in the state’s official toll of Covid-19 victims. The Bharatiya Janata Party-led state government has denied the allegation­s.

Officials on Saturday gave a detailed presentati­on on stateand district-level situation of Covid-19 testing, oxygen availabili­ty and health care infrastruc­ture. They further briefed the Prime Minister about the slowdown of the second wave of infections and said that daily new cases across the country had reduced from over 400,000 a day. On average, India added 340,584 new cases daily in the last seven days, as compared to 391,819 cases/day for the week ending May 9.

The PMO said the road map for future vaccine availabili­ty was also discussed, with Modi directing officials to work closely with states to fasten the pace of inoculatio­ns.

In recent days, vaccinatio­n centres across several states such as Maharashtr­a and Delhi said they halted inoculatio­ns due to a scarcity of vaccine doses. Delhi chief minister Arvind Kejriwal also appealed to the Centre this week not to leave it only to the state government­s to procure doses from internatio­nal vaccine makers for the 18-44 age group.

Congress leader Rahul Gandhi on Saturday attacked the central government over its Covid-19 strategy and said that its “disastrous vaccine strategy” will ensure a devastatin­g third wave. “It can’t be repeated enough-India needs a proper vaccine strategy!” he wrote.

 ?? SANJEEV VERMA/HT PHOTO ?? Health workers at a Covid care centre in New Delhi on Saturday.
SANJEEV VERMA/HT PHOTO Health workers at a Covid care centre in New Delhi on Saturday.

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