Tag: Pandemic

  • EXPLAINER: How worrying is the variant first seen in India?

    By Associated Press
    LONDON: For the first time in months, people across England are meeting indoors at pubs, restaurants, cinemas, gyms and elsewhere as coronavirus rules were relaxed this week.

    But Prime Minister Boris Johnson warned Britons to be cautious and some of the scientists advising him say restrictions might need to be reimposed quickly because of a worrying variant first detected in India.

    Here’s a look at what we know and don’t know about the variant:

    WHAT IS THIS VARIANT?

    The COVID-19 variant first identified in India has been classified as a “variant of concern” by Britain and the World Health Organization, meaning there is some evidence that it spreads more easily between people, causes more severe disease, or might be less responsive to treatments and vaccines.

    “The absolute numbers of cases (of the variant) in the U.K. remain quite small, but the growth rate is quite high,” said Nick Loman, a professor of microbial genomics at the University of Birmingham.

    To date, there have been more than 2,300 cases identified in Britain. Figures released by Public Health England show cases of the variant first detected in India have tripled in the past week and experts say it’s on track to become the most dominant COVID-19 variant in the country.

    Maria Van Kerkhove, WHO’s COVID-19 technical lead, said more information was still needed about the variant’s spread globally.

    “We need more sequencing, targeted sequencing to be done and to be shared in India and elsewhere so that we know how much of this virus is circulating,” she said.

    HOW TRANSMISSIBLE IS THE VARIANT?

    We don’t entirely know. But according to the minutes of an expert group advising the government last week, scientists said “it is a realistic possibility that (the variant first seen in India) is as much as 50% more transmissible” than the variant first reported in Britain — whose explosive spread led to the country’s longest lockdown in January.

    “There are plausible biological reasons as to why some of the mutations present could make this variant more transmissible,” they concluded. If the variant proves to be 40 to 50% more transmissible, the scientists predicted that would “lead to a much larger peak” of cases, hospitalizations and deaths than previous waves of coronavirus — particularly if the government continues with its existing plans to exit lockdown.

    Dr. Jeremy Farrar, director of the Wellcome Trust and one of the scientists advising the government, said it was entirely possible the COVID-19 restrictions relaxed on Monday might need to be reintroduced soon if the variant’s spread leads to a spike in hospitalizations and deaths.

    “A very careful lifting (of restrictions) is reasonable, but we may have to reverse that,” Farrar warned. Experts think the next few weeks should provide more details about how quickly the variant identified in India is sickening people and whether that might overwhelm hospitals.

    Johnson said any proof the variant identified in India is more dangerous could “pose a serious disruption” to the U.K. government’s plans to lift all remaining COVID-19 restrictions next month.

    DO VACCINES WORK AGAINST THIS VARIANT?

    Scientists think so but are still waiting for definitive answers.

    At a press briefing last week, Marco Cavaleri, head of vaccines at the European Medicines Agency, said the data appeared “rather reassuring” that vaccines made by Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna would protect against the variant first seen in India.

    He said the agency was still gathering more information on the effectiveness of the shots made by AstraZeneca and Johnson & Johnson and was “pretty confident” those vaccines too would afford people enough protection from the variant.

    “Urgent experimental data is being generated (for this variant),” said Sharon Peacock of the U.K. COVID-19 Genomics Consortium. She noted that vaccines appear to work against other variants to date but that it is important to determine if one dose is effective or if two are needed.

    In the areas of the U.K. worst hit by the variant, Britain’s health secretary Matt Hancock said most people hospitalized had “chosen not to have the jab.”

    On Monday, Johnson said people over 50 and those with underlying health conditions would have their wait for a second vaccine dose cut from 12 weeks to eight, over concerns about the variant’s rapid spread.

  • Kin seek temporary release of 16 jailed Elgar Parishad case accused in view of COVID-19 pandemic

    By PTI
    MUMBAI: Friends and family members of the Elgar Parishad-Maoist links case accused, who are lodged in jails in and around Mumbai, on Saturday sought their release on interim bail in view of the COVID-19 pandemic, saying that the prisons lacked medical facilities to deal with the virus.

    The friends and relatives of 16 accused, including Hany Babu, Stan Swamy and Sudha Bharadwaj, made the demand during a virtual press conference.

    While the male accused in the case are lodged in Navi Mumbai’s Taloja jail, the women accused are kept in Bayculla prison of central Mumbai.

    Their kin said there was no planning or infrastructure in Taloja and Byculla jails to tackle the pandemic situation, which is why they should be granted interim bail.

    Jenny Rowena, wife of Hany Babu, said the situation in jails is verydangerous.

    “There is no plan in place. Even the jail staffers are getting infected with coronavirus. Jail hospitals don’t have doctors or trained staff to take care of the patients,” she said.

    “It seems there is no value to life if you are in a prison. A serious note should be taken and they (accused) should be temporarily released on bail,” she said.

    Rowena had earlier said that Hany Babu had acute eye infection and was not getting proper medical treatment at the jail.

    During the press conference, she reiterated that Babu cannot see properly and suffers from double vision in one eye.

    Swamy’s friend Father Joe Xavier said Swamy’s sample was taken for COVID-19 testing in October last year.

    But now, although he has cough and fever, the jail authorities are not getting him tested for the virus, he alleged.

    He said during their last telephonic conversation, Swamy had told him that he was “fragile” and feeling helpless.

    Maaysha, daughter of Sudha Bharadwaj, said her mother has co-morbidity.

    “Bharadwaj already had health issues prior to her arrest and she has developed a number of problems in prison, due to the unhygienic livingconditions there,” she said.

    She is “extremely vulnerable” to the virus, her daughter added.

    Minal Gadling, wife of Surendra Gadling, alleged that her husband has been denied new spectacles by jail authorities for months.

    On Wednesday, the family members of these accused sent a letter to Maharashtra Chief Minister Udhav Thackeray, seeking their release from prisons in view of the pandemic.

    The Elgar Parishad case relates to alleged inflammatory speeches delivered at a conclave held in Pune city on December 31, 2017, which the police claimed triggered violence the next day near the Koregaon-Bhima war memorial in the district.

    Pune Police claimed that the conclave was backed by Maoists.

    The case was later taken over by the National Investigation Agency (NIA).

    Activist Varavara Rao, also an accused in the case, has been granted bail by Bombay High Court earlier.

  • After cities, now villages are in the hands of god: Rahul Gandhi on Covid surge

    By PTI
    NEW DELHI: Hitting out at the Centre for continuing the construction work for the Central Vista redevelopment project amid the raging COVID-19 pandemic, Congress leader Rahul Gandhi on Sunday said the country needs breath and not the prime minister’s residence.

    The redevelopment project of the Central Vista — the power corridor of the country — envisages a new triangular Parliament building, a common Central Secretariat, the revamping of the three-km-long Rajpath from the Rashtrapati Bhavan to India Gate and new residences for the prime minister and the vice president.

    The government has brought the construction work for the ambitious project under the ambit of “essential services” to ensure smooth movement of labourers during the ongoing lockdown in Delhi.

    “The country needs breath, not the prime minister’s residence,” Gandhi said in a tweet, sharing pictures of people standing in a queue for refilling oxygen cylinders and the construction work for the Central Vista project on Rajpath.

    Amid rising COVID-19 cases, several states have been facing a crippling shortage of oxygen, leaving hospitals and family members of patients scrambling to ensure a steady supply.

    Gandhi and his Congress party have been asking the government to shelve its plans on the Central Vista project and give priority to improving the country’s medical infrastructure amid the COVID-19 pandemic to save people’s lives.

    The opposition party has also criticised the Centre for according the construction work for the Central Vista project the “essential services” tag and accused the government of having its priorities wrong.

    In another tweet, Gandhi said the pandemic is spreading fast in rural areas. “After cities, now villages are also dependent on God,” the former Congress president tweeted in Hindi.

    On Sunday, India recorded 4,03,738 fresh COVID-19 cases that pushed the tally to 2,22,96,414 while 4,092 more fatalities took the death toll to 2,42,362, according to the Union health ministry.

  • Role of private doctors crucial in fight against COVID-19: Maharashtra CM

    By PTI
    MUMBAI: Maharashtra Chief Minister Uddhav Thackeray on Sunday stressed on the role of private doctors, specially family physicians, in the fight against COVID-19, saying they can help in early diagnosis of the infection in their patients and facilitate timely treatment for them.

    Addressing around 700 private doctors from across the state during a meeting held via video conference, Thackeray appealed to them to join hands with the state administration to curb spread of the viral infection.

    Thackeray said if family physicians keep a check on the treatment of their patients in home isolation and update ward officers regularly, the civic body concerned can make arrangements for their further treatment in a proper way.

    “Family doctors play an important role. If they guide the patients at the initial stage of the infection, it will be helpful to curb the virus spread. They can identify symptoms and check whether a patient is asymptomatic or needs hospitalisation,” he said.

    The CM said family doctors should focus on patients in home isolation so that if required, they can be shifted to hospitals timely.

    He appealed to private doctors to register themselves with the COVID-19 care centres and jumbo field hospitals in their localities and visit the facilities for consultation. It is necessary to have uniformity in the treatment protocol, he added.

    Thackeray also said the state’s oxygen production capacity is 1,270 metric tonne, but due to the surge in COVID-19 cases, thedemand has risen to 1,700 MT.

    “We have prepared short and long-term plans to become self-sufficient in oxygen and the enhanced production capacity of the life-saving gas will be realised soon,” he said.

    During the meeting, the state government’s task force of medical experts, comprising Sanjay Oak, Shashank Joshi, Rahul Pandit, Tatyarao Lahane and others, informed private medical practitioners about COVID-19 treatment protocols.

    They told the doctors about use of steroids, importance of six-minute walk test, how to identify the need for giving oxygen, identifying reduction in oxygen level, treatment of mucormycosis-a fungal infection detected in COVID-19 survivors, use of key anti-viral drug Remdesivir and taking care of patients on ventilators.

    Thackeray said a paediatric task force is also being set up by the state government as experts are of the view that the third wave of COVID-19 could affect children.

    Around 700 private doctors participated the virtual meeting on Sunday, while 300 doctors had attended a meeting held some days back via video conference with Thackeray and the task force members, a statement issued by the Chief Minister’s Office said.

  • Madhya Pradesh : COVID-19 induced curfew extended in Bhopal till May 17

    By PTI
    BHOPAL: The district administration on Sunday extended the COVID-19 induced curfew in the Madhya Pradesh capital till May 17, an official said.

    The curfew was supposed to be lifted at 6 am on May 10. Enforced on April 12 given the rise in coronavirus positive cases, the curfew was later extended subsequently after every one week till May 10.

    “The corona curfew is extended in the areas under the Bhopal Municipal Corporation and Berasia town till 6 am on May 17 as per the order issued by district collector Avinash Lavaniyam,” the official said.

    He said essential services and emergency travel are exempted from the purview of the restrictions on the movement of people.

    As of Saturday, Bhopal’s COVID-19 caseload stood at 1,02,776 while the death toll stood at 788, as per the state health department.

  • Heinous crime by Centre to export vaccines when people dying in our own country: Sisodia

    He said the Centre should now ensure that the vaccines manufactured in the country are provided to the states that are facing a shortage.

  • PM Modi speaks to Tirath to assess COVID situation in Uttarakhand 

    By PTI
    DEHRADUN: Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Sunday spoke to Uttarakhand Chief Minister Tirath Singh Rawat and assessed the coronavirus situation in the state, which is witnessing a relentless surge in the infections.

    Modi assured the state of of all possible help to combat the deadly virus. “Prime Minister Narendra Modi called up for an update on Covid cases in Uttarakhand. I apprised him with the present situation,” Rawat said in a tweet.

    Rawat expressed his gratitude to Modi for the kind gesture. The COVID-19 situation continues to be grim in Uttarakhand with around 7,000 to 9,000 people testing positive daily for the disease for the last several days.

    A total of 8,390 people had tested positive for coronavirus on Saturday while 118 more people succumbed to the infection.

  • Emirates to transport COVID relief items of NGOs for free from Dubai to India

    By PTI
    NEW DELHI: Emirates said on Sunday it will not charge NGOs anything for transporting their COVID relief material on its flights from Dubai to India.

    India has been badly hit by the second wave of coronavirus and hospitals in several states are reeling under shortage of health workers, vaccines, oxygen, drugs and beds.

    “Emirates will offer cargo capacity free of charge on an “as available” basis on all of its flights to nine cities in India, to help international NGOs rapidly deliver relief supplies, where it is needed,” the airline said in a statement.

    Sheikh Ahmed bin Saeed Al Maktoum, Emirates’ Chairman and Chief Executive, said, “Emirates has a lot of experience in humanitarian relief efforts, and with 95 weekly flights to nine destinations in India, we will be offering regular and reliable widebody capacity for relief materials”

    India recorded 4,03,738 fresh COVID-19 cases in a day, which pushed the tally to 2,22,96,414, according to the Union health ministry data updated on Sunday. The death toll climbed to 2,42,362 with 4,092 daily deaths, the data updated at 8 am show.

  • Ten states account for over 71 per cent of new COVID-19 cases

    By PTI
    NEW DELHI: Maharashtra, Karnataka and Delhi are among 10 states that account for 71.75 per cent of the 4,03,738 new COVID-19 cases registered in a day, the Union Health Ministry said on Sunday.

    The other states in the list of 10 are Kerala, Tamil Nadu, Uttar Pradesh, Andhra Pradesh, West Bengal, Rajasthan, and Haryana.

    Maharashtra has reported the highest daily new cases at 56,578. It is followed by Karnataka with 47,563 while Kerala reported 41,971 new cases A total of more than 30.22 crore tests have been conducted so far across the country while the daily COVID-19 positivity rate stands at 21.64 per cent, the ministry said.

    India’s total active caseload has reached 37,36,648 and now comprises 16.76 per cent of the country’s total infections. A net incline of 13,202 cases has been recorded in the total active caseload in a span of 24 hours.

    Maharashtra, Karnataka, Kerala, Tamil Nadu, Uttar Pradesh, Rajasthan, Andhra Pradesh, Gujarat, Tamil Nadu, Chhattisgarh, West Bengal, Haryana, Bihar and Madhya Pradesh cumulatively account for 82.94 per cent of India’s total active cases, the ministry stated.

    “The National Mortality Rate has been falling and currently stands at 1.09 per cent,” the ministry said.

    Besides, 4,092 deaths were reported in a span of 24 hours. Ten states account for 74.93 per cent of the new deaths. Maharashtra saw the maximum casualties (864).Karnataka follows with 482 daily deaths.

    Twenty states and UTs have deaths per million population lower than the national average (176), while 16 states and UTs have deaths per million population higher than the national average the ministry highlighted.

    The cumulative number of COVID-19 vaccine doses administered in the country has exceeded 16.94 crore. Maharashtra, Rajasthan, Gujarat, Uttar Pradesh, West Bengal, Karmataka, Madhya Pradesh, Kerala, Bihar and Andhra Pradesh account for 66.78 per cent of the cumulative doses given so far in the country, the ministry said.

    Cumulatively 17,84,869 beneficiaries in the age group of 18-44 years have received their first dose of COVID vaccine.

    More than 20 lakh vaccination doses were administered in the last 24 hours. As on Day-113 of the vaccination drive (May 8), 20,23,532 vaccine doses were given.

    Across 16,722 sessions, 8,37,695 beneficiaries were vaccinated for first dose and 11,85,837 beneficiaries received their second dose of vaccine.

    Besides the global community is extending a helping hand to support India’s efforts to meet the challenges and requirements of the unprecedented surge in the number of COVID-19 cases in the second wave of the global pandemic.

    The Centre has been ensuring the global aid is being effectively and promptly allocated and delivered to states and UTs to supplement their efforts during this critical phase, the ministry said.

    It said 6,608 oxygen concentrators, 3,856 oxygen cylinders, 14 oxygen generation plants, 4,330 ventilators/ Bi PAP/C PAP and more than 3 lakh Remdesivir vials have been delivered or dispatched, so far.

  • Chhattisgarh govenment allows home delivery of liquor amid lockdown

    By PTI
    RAIPUR: The Chhattisgarh government has allowed home delivery of liquor in the state through online sale during the ongoing coronavirus-enforced lockdown, officials said on Sunday.

    The opposition BJP in Chhattisgarh criticised the ruling Congress over the decision, claiming that it seems the state government’s priority was to provide liquor to people instead of medical facilities during the COVID-19 pandemic.

    The state commercial taxes department in an order on Saturday gave permission to the excise commissioner to allow home delivery of liquor through online orders, officials said. During the lockdown, liquor shops are not allowed to open in the state.

    “To curb illegal manufacturing, sale, transportation and possession of liquor during the lockdown period, permission has been granted for its home delivery through online orders from Monday,” an official from the excise department said.

    Timings for the home delivery of liquor have been fixed from 9 am to 8 pm. The district administration can change the timings as per the local situation, the official said.

    The Chhattisgarh State Marketing Corporation Limited (CSMCL) will decide which shops will provide the home delivery service and customers will have to make the payment in advance while placing the order, he said.

    The state government had earlier also allowed online sale of liquor in May last year when shops were closed due to restrictions imposed to contain the spread of COVID-19 during its first wave.

    Like earlier, people can book orders on the CSMCL’s website or its app available on mobile playstore.

    Customers can order up to five litres of liquor at a time and Rs 100 will be charged for home delivery service, which will be available within 15 km of the shop concerned, the official said.

    Chhattisgarh Excise Minister Kawasi Lakhma on Saturday said in view of incidents of illegal sale of liquor and deaths after consumption of sanitisers and alcohol-based medicines as a substitute for liquor, the government was considering to restart the home delivery service of liquor.

    He said the lockdown is in force in the state since some time and liquor shops are shut. Police have been taking necessary action to thwart illegal sale of liquor in Chhattisgarh from neighbouring states.

    “Besides, it’s a big headache as a large number of people recently died in Bilaspur (after consuming an alcohol- based homeopathy syrup) and a sad incident was also earlier reported in Raipur,” Lakhma said.

    Meanwhile, the BJP slammed the state government over its decision to allow home delivery of liquor.

    “The decision shows the state government has no concern for the health of citizens. Instead of focusing on arranging treatment facilities for COVID-19, it is giving priority to serving liquor,” Leader of Opposition Dharamlal Kaushik claimed.