Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

‘Dharavi model’ helped tame 2nd Covid wave in slum area: Officials

- Press Trust of India

MUMBAI: After reporting up to 99 Covid-19 cases daily in April, Mumbai’s slum colony of Dharavi has seen a gradual drop in single-day infections - below 5 - in the last couple of days with the tally of patients under treatment dropping to 50, marking a turnaround in the second wave.

The ‘Dharavi model’ of Covid-19 management and the vaccinatio­n drive have helped in successful­ly containing the second wave in the area, officials said.

A steady drop in coronaviru­s cases in Dharavi, a sprawling and congested shanty town which was once a Covid-19 hotspot, has brought huge relief to the civic authoritie­s in Mumbai.

BMC (Brihanmumb­ai Municipal Corporatio­n) officials said the slum cluster, spread across 2.5 square km and located on the border of the island city, reported three and four cases on Wednesday and Thursday, respective­ly, while Mumbai is still witnessing daily coronaviru­s cases in four digits.

They said Dharavi’s active cases have come down to just 50 (6,398 of the total 6,802 Covid-19 patients have recovered, while 354 have died).

This was in sharp contrast to the adjoining Dadar and Mahim areas, which have 204 and 254 active cases, respective­ly.

Since the outbreak of coronaviru­s in April 2020, the slumdomina­ted area has reported 354 deaths (till May 26). Of those, 42 fatalities have been recorded since February 7, 2021, the officials said.

According to them, the daily Covid-19 cases in Dharavi started going up from mid-february, when Mumbai was hit by a second wave of the coronaviru­s infection.

Cases in the slum-dominated area rose significan­tly in March and peaked in April, when it reported the highest single-day spike of 99 cases on April 8.

The sharp rise in daily infections pushed the civic authoritie­s to once again fall back on the “Dharavi model” which involved 4Ts - tracing, tracking, testing and treating - a strategy which was praised by the World Health Organisati­on (WHO) during the first wave of Covid-19.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India