Tuesday, April 14, 2020

TRAVELLER'S CONCERN ABOUT OUR INDIA................................PLEASE CO-OPERATE ..........BETTER WORLD WILL BE AVAILABLE TO YOU IN NEXT FEW MONTHS WHEN WE WIN THE WAR AGAINST THIS PANDEMIC.. STAY HOME STAY SAFE.

India scrambles to curb virus after late start

NEW DELHI -- Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi extended the world’s largest coronavirus lockdown on Tuesday to head off the epidemic's peak, with officials racing to make up for lost time as the caseload crossed 10,000.
Modi ordered India's 1.3 billion people to continue to largely stay inside until May 3, but said some restrictions away from infection hotspots would be eased on April 20 to help poor people dependent upon daily wages.
India has a long history of battling infectious disease, from a 19th-century malaria epidemic to the Nipah virus outbreak in 2018. But experts have said these experiences — and the monthslong head start India had while neighboring China contended with the coronavirus — were squandered.
A look at why India was forced to take such severe measures to curb the spread of the disease and what it achieved in the first 21 days of the lockdown:
———

DELAYS AND DENIALS

India's first coronavirus meeting took place on Jan. 8, and its first case was detected Jan. 30. But it wasn’t until the World Health Organization declared the virus a pandemic on March 12 that the government’s response kicked into gear.
The Indian Council for Medical Research, or ICMR, the government’s top research body, said mitigation was the solution to keeping the virus’ spread in check. It released a mathematical model in February that suggested that the government was relying too heavily on screening incoming travelers. It recommended testing for asymptomatic cases and implementing strict social isolation. The expert advice was ignored for weeks.
Moreover, screening wasn't uniform, said Dr. T. Jacob John, a leading Indian epidemiologist.
Even as people tested positive in distant corners of India, far removed from foreign travelers, Indian officials maintained there was no local transmission.
———

SCANT SUPPLIES

The lack of personal protective equipment for health workers has led some to resign, others to protest, and others to make use of anything from raincoats to motorcycle helmets.
A day after India’s first detected case, the government banned the export of personal protective equipment. Then, on Feb. 8, it reversed the order and on Feb. 25, it also lifted restrictions on the export of raw materials for PPEs. The WHO in late February predicted shortages. But Indian health ministry joint secretary Lav Aggarwal said in March that India hadn’t received the advisory.
Exports were finally stopped on March 19 and Aggarwal said that India had begun “developing indigenous capacity” to manufacture PPE in January. But several state leaders have said that shortages continue to hamper efforts.
Dr. Srinivas Rajkumar T., the general secretary of a doctors’ association at the All India Institute of Medical Science in Delhi, a top hospital, said that “while the situation has improved slightly, it is marginal. There are still concerns over the quality of the equipment we have.”
———

TOO FEW TESTS

India had tested 181,028 people by April 12, or one in 6,000 of its 1.3 billion people, compared to one in 100 people tested in South Korea and one in 150 in the United States.
Initially India had some of the world’s most stringent testing criteria and used only about a third of its testing capacity. In recent weeks it has expanded its criteria from patients with an association with international travel to all those with severe acute respiratory illness.
The ICMR defended India's limited testing, saying on March 17 that the WHO appeal for countries to “test, test, test” didn’t apply to India.
Last week, the organization said it would build more capacity to enable the country to test 100,000 samples per day. But the production of test kits has been hampered by red tape, and skyrocketing global demand has led to shortages. According to K. Shanmugam, the top bureaucrat in the southern state of Tamil Nadu, rapid test kits ordered by India from China have been diverted to the U.S.
The ICMR refused to comment on the reported diversion but said that it has enough kits to last six weeks -- provided that India continues to test at the same rate.
———

MISTRUST

When Modi announced a near-total lockdown on March 24, India's 1.3 billion people had just four hours before most of the economy came to a halt. He promised essentials including food and medicine would be provided but didn’t say how or when. The announcement sent panicked buyers crowding into stores, and tens of thousands of India’s poorest onto the roads, walking toward their villages to avoid dying of hunger in cities.
Public health experts have privately shared concerns that people with symptoms may be shying away from testing because of widespread reports of unhygienic conditions in India's quarantine facilities and violence, including one reported rape.
———

THE LOCKDOWN

The lockdown has bought India time to bolster its capacity to cope with a surge in the disease.
India's public health system was feeble even before the new virus. It has only 0.5 hospital beds and 0.9 doctors per 1,000 people, compared to China's 4.2 hospital beds and 1.8 doctors per 1,000 people.
The country has set up 601 dedicated coronavirus hospitals, and in recent days has ramped up testing, conducting more than 15,000 per day and roping in private labs to test more.
But critics said preparations still don't reflect reality.
“Numbers at the moment are not even picking up one-one-hundredth of the actual cases in the community,” said Yogesh Jain, a community health expert from Chattisgarh.

REOPENINGS WEIGHED FOR TRAVELLERS: INDIA, FRANCE ENTENDS LOCKDOWNS: VIRUS UPDATE

India scrambles to curb virus after late start

NEW DELHI -- Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi extended the world’s largest coronavirus lockdown on Tuesday to head off the epidemic's peak, with officials racing to make up for lost time as the caseload crossed 10,000.
Modi ordered India's 1.3 billion people to continue to largely stay inside until May 3, but said some restrictions away from infection hotspots would be eased on April 20 to help poor people dependent upon daily wages.
India has a long history of battling infectious disease, from a 19th-century malaria epidemic to the Nipah virus outbreak in 2018. But experts have said these experiences — and the monthslong head start India had while neighboring China contended with the coronavirus — were squandered.
A look at why India was forced to take such severe measures to curb the spread of the disease and what it achieved in the first 21 days of the lockdown:
———

DELAYS AND DENIALS

India's first coronavirus meeting took place on Jan. 8, and its first case was detected Jan. 30. But it wasn’t until the World Health Organization declared the virus a pandemic on March 12 that the government’s response kicked into gear.
The Indian Council for Medical Research, or ICMR, the government’s top research body, said mitigation was the solution to keeping the virus’ spread in check. It released a mathematical model in February that suggested that the government was relying too heavily on screening incoming travelers. It recommended testing for asymptomatic cases and implementing strict social isolation. The expert advice was ignored for weeks.
Moreover, screening wasn't uniform, said Dr. T. Jacob John, a leading Indian epidemiologist.
Even as people tested positive in distant corners of India, far removed from foreign travelers, Indian officials maintained there was no local transmission.
———

SCANT SUPPLIES

The lack of personal protective equipment for health workers has led some to resign, others to protest, and others to make use of anything from raincoats to motorcycle helmets.
A day after India’s first detected case, the government banned the export of personal protective equipment. Then, on Feb. 8, it reversed the order and on Feb. 25, it also lifted restrictions on the export of raw materials for PPEs. The WHO in late February predicted shortages. But Indian health ministry joint secretary Lav Aggarwal said in March that India hadn’t received the advisory.
Exports were finally stopped on March 19 and Aggarwal said that India had begun “developing indigenous capacity” to manufacture PPE in January. But several state leaders have said that shortages continue to hamper efforts.
Dr. Srinivas Rajkumar T., the general secretary of a doctors’ association at the All India Institute of Medical Science in Delhi, a top hospital, said that “while the situation has improved slightly, it is marginal. There are still concerns over the quality of the equipment we have.”
———

TOO FEW TESTS

India had tested 181,028 people by April 12, or one in 6,000 of its 1.3 billion people, compared to one in 100 people tested in South Korea and one in 150 in the United States.
Initially India had some of the world’s most stringent testing criteria and used only about a third of its testing capacity. In recent weeks it has expanded its criteria from patients with an association with international travel to all those with severe acute respiratory illness.
The ICMR defended India's limited testing, saying on March 17 that the WHO appeal for countries to “test, test, test” didn’t apply to India.
Last week, the organization said it would build more capacity to enable the country to test 100,000 samples per day. But the production of test kits has been hampered by red tape, and skyrocketing global demand has led to shortages. According to K. Shanmugam, the top bureaucrat in the southern state of Tamil Nadu, rapid test kits ordered by India from China have been diverted to the U.S.
The ICMR refused to comment on the reported diversion but said that it has enough kits to last six weeks -- provided that India continues to test at the same rate.
———

MISTRUST

When Modi announced a near-total lockdown on March 24, India's 1.3 billion people had just four hours before most of the economy came to a halt. He promised essentials including food and medicine would be provided but didn’t say how or when. The announcement sent panicked buyers crowding into stores, and tens of thousands of India’s poorest onto the roads, walking toward their villages to avoid dying of hunger in cities.
Public health experts have privately shared concerns that people with symptoms may be shying away from testing because of widespread reports of unhygienic conditions in India's quarantine facilities and violence, including one reported rape.
———

THE LOCKDOWN

The lockdown has bought India time to bolster its capacity to cope with a surge in the disease.
India's public health system was feeble even before the new virus. It has only 0.5 hospital beds and 0.9 doctors per 1,000 people, compared to China's 4.2 hospital beds and 1.8 doctors per 1,000 people.
The country has set up 601 dedicated coronavirus hospitals, and in recent days has ramped up testing, conducting more than 15,000 per day and roping in private labs to test more.
But critics said preparations still don't reflect reality.
“Numbers at the moment are not even picking up one-one-hundredth of the actual cases in the community,” said Yogesh Jain, a community health expert from Chattisgarh.

India extends world's biggest lockdown as coronavirus cases cross 10,000

NEW DELHI (Reuters) - India extended on Tuesday a nationwide lockdown for its 1.3 billion people until May 3 as its prime minister warned of economic sacrifices to save lives as the number of coronavirus cases crossed 10,000.

Sharp downward revisions to economic growth forecasts in the wake of the pandemic point toward sickening levels of unemployment, but Prime Minister Narendra Modi urged Indians to maintain the discipline shown in the first three weeks of the country’s lockdown.

“That means until May 3, each and every one of us will have to remain in the lockdown,” Modi said in a televised address to the nation.

“From an economic only point of view, it undoubtedly looks costly right now; but measured against the lives of Indian citizens, there is no comparison itself.”

India’s neighbor, Pakistan, is also due to take a decision on its lockdown ending on Wednesday.

Modi spoke as the latest government data showed the number of people infected with coronavirus in India had reached 10,363, with 339 deaths.

Although the numbers are small compared with hard-hit Western nations, health experts fear that is because of India’s low levels of testing, and actual infection levels could be far higher.

Lacking testing kits and protective gear for medical workers, India has only tested 137 per million of its population, compared with 15,935 per million in Italy, and 8,138 in the United States.

Health experts have warned that widespread contagion could be disastrous in a country where millions live in dense slums and the health care system is overstretched.

So far, more than three-quarters of India’s cases are concentrated in about 80 of the country’s more than 700 districts, including the two big cities, New Delhi and Mumbai.

Since Modi first imposed the lockdown in late March, the unemployment rate has almost doubled to around 14.5%, according to data compiled by the Centre for Monitoring Indian Economy (CMIE), a Mumbai based private think-tank.

The shutdown sparked an exodus of millions of workers from small industries like textiles and leather, and service industries like retail, tourism, construction and other sectors in urban areas to their villages.

“I am well aware of the problems you have faced - some for food, some for movement from place to place, and others for staying away from homes and families,” Modi said.

Agriculture, which employs about 45% of India’s labor force, is still faring better though the sector has been hampered by disruptions to logistics.

A man watches India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi's address to the nation on television announcing the extension of a nationwide lockdown till May 3, to limit the spreading of coronavirus disease (COVID-19), in New Delhi, India, April 14, 2020. REUTERS/Anushree FadnavisSLIGHT EASING OF CURBS POSSIBLE
For the next five days, the lockdown will be enforced even more strictly, Modi said, adding that the government could then ease some curbs in parts of the country which are not hotspots to allow some essential activities.

But, the number of jobless is only going to get worse as India needs annual economic growth over 8% to absorb the millions of young people entering the workforce each month.

Most private economists, and the World Bank have revised down growth forecasts for the current year to between 1.5% to 2.8% as a result of the pandemic. Barclays Bank, in a note to clients on Tuesday, forecast zero growth in 2020.

Presenting its annual budget in February, the government had factored in the growth of up to 6.5% for the fiscal year through to March 2021, which now appears a broken dream.

PAKISTAN DECISION DUE
Facing an even more dire economic situation, neighboring Pakistan is also due to decide on how to proceed once its lockdown ends on Wednesday and the expectation is some curbs would be lifted.

“The business community is asking us that what are the safety measures they need to take, so that they can run their business... and generally we also agree with that, that we have to go to that direction,” said Minister for Planning Asad Umar.

The World Bank has warned that Pakistan along with Afghanistan is expected to fall into recession in fiscal 2020/21 and Prime Minister Imran Khan has sought debt relief from international lenders to combat the pandemic.

Official government figures on the spread of the coronavirus in South Asia are as follows:

* India has 10,363 confirmed cases, including 339 deaths

* Pakistan has 5,374 cases, including 93 deaths

* Bangladesh has 803 cases, including 39 deaths

* Afghanistan has 714 cases, including 23 deaths

* Sri Lanka has 203 cases, including 7 deaths

* Maldives has 20 cases and no deaths

A man selling coconuts rides his trishaw on a graffiti on a road depicting the coronavirus as an attempt to raise awareness about the importance of staying at home during a 21-day nationwide lockdown to slow the spreading of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), in Chennai, India, April 13, 2020. REUTERS/P. Ravikumar
* Nepal has 14 cases and no deaths

* Bhutan has five cases and no deaths