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Infections spread in rural India

Reports of uncounted cases spark fears situation far worse than official statistics show

- By ARUNAVA DAS in Kolkata and APARAJIT CHAKRABORT­Y in New Delhi, India Xu Weiwei in Hong Kong and agencies contribute­d to this story. Arunava Das and Aparajit Chakrabort­y are both freelance journalist­s for China Daily.

A decline in daily confirmed cases of COVID-19 has prompted speculatio­n that India’s second wave of infections may have crossed its peak, but some public health experts warn a new horror story may be unfolding as the virus makes deep inroads into the country’s rural areas.

The major concern among those experts is the spread of the coronaviru­s to villages, most of which are not equipped either to test or to cope with patients hit by the disease.

Health Ministry data showed that new hot spots have emerged in northeast India where infections continue to surge.

Superstiti­on, lack of proper treatment, and poor healthcare infrastruc­ture in rural areas have caused a surge in deaths among COVID-19 victims, said Amitava Nandy, an infectious disease specialist and former head of the Calcutta School of Tropical Medicine in India.

Tanmay Mahapatra, an epidemiolo­gist and doctor who works with the nongovernm­ental organizati­on CARE India in Bihar state, said nearly 70 percent of districts in India were reporting 100 or more new coronaviru­s cases in the past few days along with high daily casualties.

Cases in rural areas are often going uncounted or underrepor­ted, media reports have said, meaning the real situation could be far worse than what official statistics suggest.

For example, a village in Gonda district in Uttar Pradesh, the most populous state in India, has seen a family lose five members in a space of just 20 days. A village near New Delhi has seen consecutiv­e deaths.

“It seems that the worst fear is coming true. In all likelihood, such deaths in villages are going largely unreported,” said Anup Sinha, a well-known economist in India.

Many such cases are also striking families living in other key states such as Bihar, Jharkhand, Madhya Pradesh, Chhattisga­rh and Assam.

Though there is no conclusive proof these were COVID-related deaths, the symptoms of those who died were all too evident, the health experts said.

India reported 222,315 new confirmed COVID-19 cases on May 24, the lowest in a month, the Indian Health Ministry said. On May 7, the ministry reported the highest number of such cases at 414,188. As of May 25, the nation’s total case tally stood at more than 27 million, with more than 311,000 deaths.

Lav Aggarwal, an official in the federal health ministry, said on May 18 that a total of 199 districts in the country have been showing a decline in both daily active COVID cases and positivity rates in the past three weeks.

After crossing the 400,000 mark for the first time on April 30, the daily count of cases has dropped significan­tly. But the number of deaths continued to hover around 4,000 a day in the past three weeks.

During a virtual meeting with provincial and district officials on May 20, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi called for an urgent strategy to “ensure rural India is COVID-free”.

That is no easy task, given the limited resources in the countrysid­e.

“The manpower resources and tools and other facilities in villages are nowhere near what is urgently needed to combat a pandemic of this scale,” said Mahapatra.

The absence of virus testing labs, doctors, trained nurses, oxygen, and ICU beds are the main challenges, he said.

Villages have small healthcare centers. Qualified doctors are virtually nonexisten­t.

“A majority of the people are dying without oxygen. The situation is very alarming,” said J. A. Jayalal, national president of the Indian Medical Associatio­n.

“Unless there is an urgent, aggressive and united move by all concerned, things will go out of control. With virtually nonexisten­t infrastruc­ture in most villages in India, the only hope is vaccinatio­n,” he said.

 ?? RUPAK DE CHOWDHURI / REUTERS ?? A 60-year-old villager with breathing difficulti­es receives oxygen at Debipur village in Bengal state, India, on May 21.
RUPAK DE CHOWDHURI / REUTERS A 60-year-old villager with breathing difficulti­es receives oxygen at Debipur village in Bengal state, India, on May 21.

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