Tag: Coronavirus Outbreak

  • Availability of COVID vaccine for kids will pave way for school reopening: AIIMS chief Dr Randeep Guleria

    By PTI
    NEW DELHI: Making COVID-19 vaccine available for children will be a milestone achievement and pave the way for reopening of schools and resumption of outdoor activities for them, AIIMS Chief Dr Randeep Guleria has said.

    He said the data of phase two and three trial of Bharat Biotech’s Covaxin on two to 18 years age group is expected by September.

    The vaccine can be available for children in India around that time following approval from the drug regulator, he said.

    “If the Pfizer vaccine gets approval before that, then it can also be an option for children,” Dr Guleria told PTI on Saturday.

    According to a senior government official, pharmaceutical major Zydus Cadila is also likely to soon apply to the Drugs Controller General of India for emergency use authorisation for its COVID-19 vaccine ZyCoV-D, which it claims can be given to both adults and children.

    “So, if the Zydus vaccine gets approval, it will be another option,” Dr Guleria said.

    ALSO WATCH: How Mumbai, India’s most crowded city, beat the odds, and the coronavirus

    He stressed that though children mostly have mild infections of COVID-19 and some even are asymptomatic, they can be carriers of the infection.

    Underscoring that there has been a major loss in studies in the last one-and-half years on account of the COVID-19 pandemic, the AIIMS chief said, “Schools have to be reopened and vaccination can play an important role in that.”

    Vaccination is the way out from the pandemic, he said.

    The government has recently cautioned that even though COVID-19 has not impacted children greatly till now, that can increase if there is a change in the behaviour of the virus or in epidemiology dynamics.

    It said that preparations are being made to deal with any such situation.

    A national expert group has been formed to review COVID-19 infections among children and approach the pandemic in a new way and reinforce the nation’s preparedness for it.

    On the issue of vaccinating children, NITI Aayog member (Health) Dr V K Paul recently said, “Child cohort is not a small one. My rough guess is that if it is between 12 to 18 years, this itself is about 13 to 14 crore population for which we will need about 25-26 crore doses.”

    He further shared that not only Bharat Biotech’s Covaxin, Zydus Cadila’s vaccine is also being tested on children.

    “So when Zydus comes for licensure soon, maybe we have enough data to take a view on whether the vaccine can be given in children,” Paul said.

  • After chat with PM Narendra Modi, Madhya Pradesh resident gets himself vaccinated against COVID-19

    By PTI
    BHOPAL: Encouraged after a chat with Prime Minister Narendra Modi who urged people to shed hesitancy against COVID-19 vaccine, a villager from Madhya Pradesh got inoculated along with his family members.

    Seeking to make people shed their reservations about vaccines against coronavirus, Modi spoke to residents of Dulariya village in MP’s Betul district.

    The chat was aired on the PM’s monthly ‘Mann Ki Baat’ broadcast on Sunday.

    Modi counselled them to take the vaccine amidst their doubts about the inoculation exercise.

    Rajesh Hirave (43) was one of those who had a chat with the PM.

    “After talking to the prime minister on Friday, I along with my family members got the vaccine shot for prevention from the coronavirus infection on Saturday,” Hirave told PTI over phone.

    “I encouraged others also, following which 127 people from the village got vaccinated,” he said.

    ALSO WATCH: How Mumbai, India’s most crowded city, beat the odds, and the coronavirus

    The villager further said he is now inspiring other locals to get the jab.

    “I am very happy to talk to the prime minister. I have no words to express my happiness,” Hirave said.

    The prime minister also spoke to another 60-year-old village resident Kishorilal Dhurve, who also later got vaccinated.

    “My father has got vaccinated and is now encouraging others to get the vaccine jab,” Dhurve’s son Ravindra told PTI.

    Hirave, while talking to the PM, said people were hesitating to get inoculated due to misconceptions being spread about it on WhatsApp.

    While speaking to Hirave and Dhurve, the prime minister said he and his nearly 100-year-old mother have taken both doses of the vaccine, and asked people not to believe in rumours and trust science and scientists.

    “The threat of COVID-19 remains and we have to focus on vaccination as well as follow COVID-19 protocols,” the PM said.

  • Indo-Japanese partnership during COVID-19 more relevant for global stability: PM Narendra Modi

    By PTI
    AHMEDABAD: The Indo-Japanese friendship and partnership during the COVID-19 crisis is more relevant for global stability and prosperity, Prime Minister Narendra Modi said on Sunday and called for further strengthening of the ties between the two countries.

    The PM was speaking after virtually inaugurating a Japanese Zen garden and Kaizen Academy set up at the premises of the Ahmedabad Management Association (AMA) here.

    In his address via video conference, Modi said the opening of the Zen garden and the Kaizen Academy here “is a symbol of the spontaneity and modernity of relations between India and Japan”.

    “The current Prime Minister of Japan, Yoshihide Suga, is a very straight-forward person. PM Suga and I believe that during the time of this COVID-19 pandemic crisis, the Indo-Japanese friendship and our partnership has become even more relevant for global stability and prosperity. Today, when we are facing several global challenges, it is the need of the hour that our friendship and relationship get stronger day by day,” Modi said.

    He said efforts like setting up of the Kaizen Academy are a beautiful reflection of this relationship.

    “We also have a strong belief in centuries-old cultural ties, and a common vision for future. Based on this, we have been continuously strengthening our special strategic and global partnership over the years. For this, we have also made a special arrangement of ‘Japan Plus’ (team of officials to promote greater Japanese investments in India) in the PMO (Prime Minister’s Office),” he said.

    ‘Zen-Kaizen’ at the AMA seeks to showcase several elements of Japanese art, culture, landscape and architecture.

    It is a joint endeavour of the Japan Information and Study Centre at AMA and the Indo-Japan Friendship Association (IJFA), Gujarat, supported by the Hyogo International Association (HIA), Japan, a release earlier said.

    Modi said this occasion of the launch of the Zen garden and Kaizen Academy is a “symbol of the spontaneity and modernity of India-Japan relations”.

    The PM said he is confident that this will further strengthen the relationship between India and Japan, bringing citizens of the two countries closer.

    “I would like the Kaizen Academy to spread the work culture of Japan in India, and increase business interaction between the two countries. We also have to give new energy to the efforts already going on in this direction. I am sure our efforts will continue like this, and India and Japan will together reach new heights of development,” he said.

    Talking about former Japanese prime minister Shinzo Abe, Modi said relations between the two countries gained a new impetus when Abe had visited Gujarat.

    He was very excited when the work of the (Mumbai-Ahmedabad) bullet train project started, the PM said.

    “Even today, when I talk to him, he remembers his Gujarat tour,” he said.

    Modi also said India and Japan have been devoted to external progress and prosperity, as much as the importance given to internal peace and progress by the two countries.

    He said the Japanese Zen garden is “a beautiful expression of this quest for peace, this simplicity.”

    Modi said the peace, ease and simplicity that the people of India have learnt through yoga and spirituality for centuries, they will see a glimpse of the same here.

    “What is ‘Zen’ in Japan is ‘dhyan’ (meditation) in India,” he said.

    “This is the meditation that Buddha gave to the world. And as far as the concept of ‘Kaizen’ is concerned, it is a living proof of the strength of our intentions in the present, of our will to move forward continuously,” he said.

    Modi said he would like the Kaizen Academy to promote the work-culture of Japan in India, and increase business interactions between the two countries.

    “We have to give new energy to the efforts that are already going in this direction, like the Indo-Japan student exchange programme between the Gujarat University and the Otemon Gakuin University of Osaka. This programme has been strengthening our relationship for over five decades. This can be further expanded. Such partnerships can be done between the two countries and also between institutions,” he said.

    Modi also talked about the relationship between Japan and Gujarat, and recalled that as the then chief minister of Gujarat, he had given special emphasis on Kaizen in the state, which was then used in administrative training, the state education education system as well as reforms in the health department.

    He said after becoming the prime minister, he took the experience from Kaizen to Delhi and started it in the PMO and other departments of the central government.

    “The affection of the people of Japan, their working style, their skills, their discipline, have always been influencing. And that’s why whenever I said I wanted to create a mini-Japan in Gujarat, the main sentiment behind it was that whenever the people of Japan come to Gujarat, they should see the same warmth, the same belongingness,” he said.

    He said Japan joined as the partner country of the Vibrant Gujarat Summit since the very beginning, and even today, the largest delegation is from Japan.

    “We are all satisfied to see the confidence that Japan has reposed in Gujarat, in the power of its people,” Modi said.

    He said more than 135 Japanese companies are working in Gujarat, in sectors including automobile, banking, construction, and pharma.

    These companies are also helping in imparting skill-development to the youth of Gujarat, he added.

  • Rahul Gandhi spreading confusion, lies about COVID vaccination: Madhya Pradesh CM Shivraj Singh Chouhan

    By PTI
    BHOPAL: Madhya Pradesh Chief Minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan on Sunday accused Congress leader Rahul Gandhi of spreading “misconceptions, confusion and lies” about COVID-19 vaccines, which was leading to many people “putting their lives in danger” by refusing to take the doses.

    He was reacting to a tweet by Gandhi in which the latter had taken a swipe at Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s radio programme Mann Ki Baat.

    “Bas Har Deshwasi Tak Vaccine Pahucha Do, Fir Chahe Mann Ki Baat Bhi Suna Do!” (Just deliver the vaccine to every citizen, and then put forth your Mann ki Baat if you want),” Gandhi had tweeted.

    Hitting back, the MP CM said the PM was providing free vaccines to all while Gandhi was “only spreading confusion”.

    “Shame on you Rahul Baba, it is prime minister Narendra Modi who is getting people vaccinated and not you.

    The prime minister is providing free vaccines to all the citizens of the country and you are only spreading confusion! You spread confusion, lied due to which many people refused to get vaccines,” Chouhan said on Twitter.

    During the day, seeking to make people shed their reservations about vaccines against coronavirus, Modi spoke to residents of Dulariya village in MP’s Betul district, and the chat was aired on the PM’s monthly ‘Mann Ki Baat’ broadcast on Sunday.

    The MP CM further tweeted, “Prime Minister Narendra Modi ji today spoke to the villagers in Dulariya village of Betul district who were not getting vaccinated due to confusion.

    Explained it to them in simple words and the villagers started taking the vaccine.

    ” While the PM had removed the clouds of confusion about vaccination, the CM said Gandhi was “putting people’s lives in danger by lying, spreading misconceptions”.

  • Goa ready to tackle COVID-19 third wave: CM Pramod Sawant

    Private hospitals have been told to mobilize extra beds for COVID treatment on short notice, Goa CM Pramod Sawant said.

  • Gujarat government announces monthly assistance, other benefits for COVID-19 orphans

    By PTI
    AHMEDABAD: The Gujarat government on Saturday announced a host of relief measures including monthly financial assistance for the children who have lost both their parents to COVID-19.

    Announcing ‘Mukhyamantri Bal Seva Yojana’, Chief Minister Vijay Rupani said such children will get Rs 4,000 per month till they turn 18.

    If they continue studies, they will get assistance of Rs 6,000 per month till they turn 21.

    This stipend will continue during higher studies too, Rupani said in a live webcast.

    All types of undergraduate and postgraduate courses will be considered valid for availing benefit under this scheme, the chief minister said.

    Such orphaned children will also get priority in various government schemes offering scholarships within India and abroad irrespective of income criteria, he added.

    The Mukhyamantri Bal Seva Yojana scheme was being launched by the state government on the eve of the completion of seven years of the Narendra Modi government at the Centre, he said.

    The children orphaned by COVID-19 from the Scheduled Castes, Scheduled Tribes, Other Backward Classes, NT-DNT and Economically Backward Classes will get the benefit of scholarships of the state Social Justice and Empowerment and Tribal Development Department irrespective of income limits.

    Orphaned children will also be eligible for educational loans for study in India and abroad on a priority basis irrespective of income limits under the existing ‘Mukhyamantri Yuva Swavalamban Yojana’.

    Children above 14 can get vocational training and those above 18 can get skill development training on a priority basis at the government’s expense under the Mukhyamantri Bal Seva Yojana, Rupani said.

    Girls orphaned by COVID-19 will get priority in admission to Kasturba Gandhi Balika Vidyalaya, a chain of residential schools run by the government.

    Their hostel expenses will also be borne by the state government.

    Orphaned girls will also get the benefit of the state’s Kunwarbai’s Mameru Scheme when they get married.

    Orphaned children will get medical treatment on priority under the Mukhyamantri Amrutam Maa card scheme.

    The guardians of such children will be covered on priority basis under the National Food Security Act so that such families can get wheat, rice, sugar and other staples at concessional rates, the chief minister said.

  • Congress MP Rahul Gandhi sends 10,000 home isolation, medical kits to Amethi for COVID patients

    By PTI
    AMETHI: Congress leader Rahul Gandhi has sent 10,000 home isolation, medical kits to his previous Lok Sabha constituency Amethi for the needy COVID-19 patients, a party leader said on Saturday.

    Chief of district unit of Congress Pradeep Singhal said 10,000 medical kits have arrived under the party’s ‘seva satyagraha’ programme and they would be given to people who need it.

    Rahul Gandhi, who is the former Lok Sabha MP from Amethi, had also earlier sent 20 oxygen concentrators and 20 oxygen cylinders to Amethi.

    Gandhi is currently the Lok Sabha MP from Wayanad in Kerala.

  • Rates of COVID deaths, positivity in Bengal now much less than first wave: CM Mamata Banerjee

    West Bengal on Saturday registered 11,514 fresh COVID-19 cases taking the tally to 13,54,956, the bulletin said.

  • Government announces scheme to provide pension to dependents of COVID-19 victims

    By PTI
    NEW DELHI: The government on Saturday announced a string of measures, including a pension for dependents of those having lost their lives due to COVID-19, among other benefits for the families who lost their earning members to the pandemic.

    Besides family pensions, insurance benefits under the Employees’ Deposit-Linked Insurance (EDLI) scheme have been enhanced and liberalised.

    Prime Minister Narendra Modi said these steps will help mitigate financial difficulties faced by these families.

    Modi said his government stands in solidarity with these families.

    To help these families live a life of dignity and maintain a good standard of living, the benefit of the Employee State Insurance Corporation (ESIC) pension scheme for employment-related death cases is being extended to even those who have died due to Covid, the PMO said in a statement.

    Dependent family members of such persons will be entitled to the benefit of pension equivalent to 90 per cent of the average daily wage drawn by the worker as per the existing norms.

    This benefit will be available retrospectively with effect from March 24 last year and for all such cases till March 24, 2022.

    The enhancement of insurance benefits under the EDLI scheme will in particular help the families of employees who have lost their lives due to the pandemic, the PMO said.

    The amount of maximum insurance benefit has been increased from Rs 6 lakh to Rs 7 lakh, and the provision of minimum insurance benefit of Rs 2.5 lakh has been restored and will apply retrospectively from February 15, 2020 for the next three years.

    To benefit families of contractual and casual workers, the condition of continuous employment in only one establishment has been liberalised, with the benefit being made available to families of even those employees who may have changed jobs in the last 12 months preceding his death, it said.

    Detailed guidelines of these schemes are being issued by the Ministry of Labour and Employment, the PMO added.

    In a tweet, Modi said, “Family Pension under ESIC and EPFO- Employees’ Deposit Linked Insurance Scheme will provide a financial cushion to those families who have lost their earning member due to COVID-19. The Government of India stands in solidarity with these families.”

    A senior Labour Ministry official said that under the ESIC scheme for the families of insured persons (IPs) who have died due to COVID-19, the beneficiary will receive pension subject to two conditions.

    “Firstly, the IP must have been registered on the ESIC online portal at least three months prior to the diagnosis of COVID disease resulting in death. Secondly, the IP must have been employed for wages and contributions for at least 78 days should have been paid or payable in respect of deceased IP during a period of one year immediately preceding the diagnosis of COVID disease resulting in death,” the official said.

    The scheme will be effective for a period of two years from March 24, 2020.

    About the EDLI scheme, the official said the actuary has estimated that eligible family members will get an additional benefit of Rs 2,185 crore from EDLI fund in the coming three years.

    The number of claims on account of death under the scheme has been estimated to be about 50,000 families per year with an increase in claims taking into account estimated death of about 10,000 workers which may occur due to Covid, the official added.

  • COVID shadow on Modi government’s anniversary for second straight year

    By PTI
    NEW DELHI: For the second straight year, the Modi government 2.0 observes its anniversary on Sunday under the grim shadow of the COVID-19 pandemic which has wreaked unprecedented devastation across the country in the last couple of months.

    In line with the sombre public mood in general, the ruling BJP has decided to confine its activities to welfare programmes and asked its members to touch at least one lakh villages across the country, unlike last year when its leaders, including Union minister, held virtual rallies and listed out government’s achievements.

    Facing flak from opposition parties over its handling of the pandemic, the Modi government on Saturday announced a flurry of measures, including monitory, education and health benefits for children orphaned by COVID-19, an indication of an awareness as to how its actions in dealing with the medical and economic challenges brought by the ravaging disease will shape the popular response to it.

    If the BJP’s high score on its ideological promises ranging from the nullification of Article 370 to the construction of Ram temple in Ayodhya, coupled with the limited suffering caused by the pandemic by then, had imbued a sense of triumphalism to its anniversary events last year, the feeling this time is decidedly different.

    Political watchers are of the view that the government’s handling of the pandemic and the ongoing vaccine exercise will be upmost in the mind of people, at least in the near future.

    The BJP’s directive to leaders to reach out to people in this hour of distress is a pointer to this.

    In over seven months, a fresh round of assembly polls, including in all-important Uttar Pradesh, is likely to be announced.

    Punjab, Uttarakhand and Manipur and Goa are expected to go to the polls in January-March next year.