What's new

Coronavirus in India

India cases cross 2.5 million with another jump

India's confirmed coronavirus cases have crossed 2.5 million with another biggest single-day spike of 65,002 in the past 24 hours.

India is behind the United States and Brazil in the number of cases.

The Health Ministry on Saturday also reported another 996 deaths for a total of 49,036.

The average daily reported cases jumped from around 15,000 in the first week of July to more than 50,000 at the beginning of August.

The Health Ministry said the rise shows the extent of testing with 800,000 carried out in a single day. But experts say India needs to pursue testing more vigorously.
 
Modi says India set to mass produce COVID-19 vaccine, launches digital health mission

NEW DELHI (Reuters) - India is ready to mass produce COVID-19 vaccines when scientists give the go-ahead, Prime Minister Narendra Modi said in his Independence Day speech on Saturday, also launching a national project to roll out health identities for each citizen.

In annual celebrations held at the 17th-century Red Fort and scaled down due to the pandemic, Modi identified health and economic self-reliance as the key priorities for his government.

“Not one, not two, as many as three coronavirus vaccines are being tested in India,” he said from the ramparts of the red sandstone palace in the old quarters of Delhi, wearing a flowing orange and white turban and covering his mouth and nose with a scarf of the same colours whenever anyone came close to him at the ceremony.

“Along with mass-production, the roadmap for distribution of vaccine to every single Indian in the least possible time is also ready,” Modi said.

At the event, soldiers who ceremonially welcomed Modi had been under quarantine days before the event. Only around 4,000 guests were allowed and made to sit six feet apart, while medical booths with ambulances were set up for any attendee showing COVID-19 symptoms during entry.

Launching a National Digital Health Mission for the country of 1.3 billion, Modi said in his seventh Independence Day speech that records of every health test, disease, medication and other details will be kept under a health ID.

“Whether it is making a doctor’s appointment, depositing money or running around for documents in the hospital, the mission will help remove all such challenges,” he said.

Without mentioning China, with whom ties have hit a low following the worst border clash in decades that killed 20 Indian soldiers in June, Modi said the country’s sovereignty was supreme.

“Anyone who has raised eyes on the sovereignty of the country, the army of the country have responded to them in the same language,” he said.

Modi also said it was important to raise India’s economic might to increase its international influence, emphasising the need to cut imports and increase exports of value-added products.

The prime minister reiterated plans to improve India’s infrastructure by spending more than 110 trillion ($1.47 trillion) rupees on around 7000 projects, saying it will help revive economic growth by creating jobs and boosting small businesses.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...launches-digital-health-mission-idUSKCN25B07W
 
India reports 961 deaths from coronavirus in the last 24 hours.
 
India's coronavirus death toll surpasses 50,000

The country reported a daily jump of 57,981 infections, taking the total to nearly 2.65 million, third only behind the United States and Brazil.

The death toll jumped by 941, with the total now 50,921.
 
Anyone has any info on this:

Does anyone know how many active cases thr are currently and how many people are in deemed as serious critical?
 
India's invisible catastrophe: fears over spread of Covid-19 into poor rural areas

Country is entering a dangerous new phase of rising infections in small towns and villages with limited access to healthcare

Where better to seek sanctuary from a virus roaring through a crowded metropolis than a remote mountainside with views of the Himalayas?

This was the reasoning that prompted Lalit Upreti, 34, to leave the Indian capital, Delhi, where he works as a cook, two months ago to return to his hamlet Khankari in Uttarakhand, near the country’s border with Nepal. Here, he thought, his family would be safe.

On 7 August, he attended a health camp organised by the village council. “I went for the heck of it, I had no symptoms but thought why not?,” said Upreti. Apart from checking for monsoon-related ailments, local health officials took swabs for Covid-19.

To his surprise, Upreti’s name appeared on the list of four villagers who tested positive.

“Here? I couldn’t believe it. We are so cut off. We don’t even need to go shopping for vegetables because we grow our own,” he said.

With a mild fever and an upset stomach, Upreti was taken to a quarantine facility the following night.

As India’s positive cases hovered around 2.4m, there are growing fears that the virus’s impact on rural communities could be devastating.

The country seems to be entering a dangerous new phase of rising infections in small towns and villages such as Khankari.

“Khankari is tiny. If my little outpost can get four cases, then it can sneak into every village in the country. I can’t sleep at night when I think of what might have happened if we hadn’t caught those four cases,” said Rajan Singh Negi, the village head of Khankari who organised the health camp..

India recorded a daily new infection record of 67,000 on Thursday.

Some 600 million Indians live in in rural areas, and fears are rising that they could be overwhelmed by an invisible catastrophe, where many will die without testing or treatment. Data from the National Family Health Survey-4 showed that only about 25% of rural Indians have access to public outpatient (OPD) healthcare..

There are also grave concerns for around 70% of India’s elderly population, who live in villages. Co-morbidities abound and are often left untreated because medical services are far away.

India’s top epidemiologist Jayaprakash Muliyil, who believes up to half of India’s population (670 million people) will get the virus, says that most people with co-morbidities in rural India fail to get treatment.

“This group, and the elderly, are more prone to getting the virus. With limited resources, their families will not rush an elderly person to hospital if they have a fever,” said Muliyil. “They will be allowed to die. That is the reality in rural India where life expectancy is 65.”

Since the deaths will be spread out across huge geographical districts, some as big as 10,000 sq km (London is 1,572 sq km), Muliyil says the real scale of the human tragedy will only emerge much later, if at all.

Virus stigma

Anecdotal evidence also suggests that daily wage labourers will not reveal their symptoms for fear of separation from their families, the stigma, and losing their wages by being quarantined.

“People in the rural areas are hiding their symptoms and are not coming forward to get tested even when the testing van is reaching the village,” said Dr Ravindra Sharma, a senior medical officer in Lakhmipur Kheri district, in India’s most populous state, Uttar Pradesh, which neighbours Uttarakhand.

At the other end of the country concern about rural outbreaks worried many in the southern state of Kerala, where a wedding and a funeral attended by one family in one of the state’s most remote villages, Valad, led to 236 new cases.

Kerala, home to coffee and tea plantations, had previously been hailed as a “model” for getting a grip on the pandemic fairly early.

Rural fears

The way the pandemic will play out in rural India, says public health experts, will be very different from the cities where, though it is still raging, doctors and health officials have got the measure of the beast, to some degree at least. That’s thanks to the fact that 80% of doctors and 60% of hospitals are in urban areas.

This relative control will be difficult to replace in large, sprawling states like Uttar Pradesh, with 200 million people, and it’s southern neighbour, Bihar, with 104 million people. Both have extremely fragile medical services.

In Bihar, one of India’s poorest states where around a third of people live below the poverty line, 90% of the population lives in villages. It has only one bed and just under 4 doctors per 10,000 people according to the 2019 National Health Profile. At the best of times, it struggles to deal with viral fevers or dengue outbreaks.

In Uttar Pradesh, despite there being 135 hospitals that deal with Covid cases, according to its Health Department, but a lack of testing is taking its toll.

Farmer Amar Jeet Singh, 47, from Navgava village in Lakhmipur Kheri district, developed a liver infection and struggled to get tested. He was refused treatment at the district hospital because he did not have a Covid-negative report.

“I was taken to the primary health centre but there was no facility for testing there. I went to the community health centre and met the same fate there too. No testing, nothing,” said Singh.

‘The government is underestimating the pandemic’

Some doctors expect the next few weeks to be sombre. Dr Harjit Singh Bhatti, the former president of the AIIMS Resident Doctors’ Association, said India’s ramped up testing was only happening in urban areas. In the countryside, nothing much had changed, he said.

He blamed the neglect of decades and inadequate spending on healthcare for what he described as a likely disaster in the coming weeks and months.

“There isn’t enough manpower and the government is not really working on improving human resources to deal with the pandemic – and this is when the pandemic has yet to reach its peak. The government is underestimating the pandemic and trying to hide the data. The results can be very dangerous,” said Bhatti.

On day three of his quarantine, Upreti, who is contemplating his future in his rural home village, says he has realised there is no place safe from the virus. “I hope I recover soon and go home but home won’t be the same again. The virus has destroyed the old sense of security.”

With India’s setting a record toll of daily infections this week (nearly 67,000), and a death toll approaching 50,000, his concerns may yet be proved right.

https://www.theguardian.com/global-...over-spread-of-covid-19-into-poor-rural-areas
 
India carries out record number of daily tests

India has carried out nearly 900,000 coronavirus tests in a single day, a record for the country, as it fights a surge of Covid-19 cases. It comes as the South Korean cluster linked to church in northern Seoul grew to 400 cases.

India’s health ministry said a record 899,000 tests were conducted in the 24 hours to Tuesday. Only the US has ever carried out more daily tests, conducting 926,876, on 24 July.

India’s tests returned 55,079 cases positive cases, taking its total tally to more than 2.7 million – behind only the US and Brazil. The daily death toll of 876, took total fatalities in the country to 51,797.

The ministry said that even with such a high rate of testing, “the positivity has remained low”, currently 8.81% compared with the weekly national average of 8.84%. The US has a 9% test positivity rate, according to the Centers for Disease Control.
 
How is India managing to test at such a significant rate.

I feel pakisfan must have high casss foo but seems we have herd immunity at this point
 
How is India managing to test at such a significant rate.

I feel pakisfan must have high casss foo but seems we have herd immunity at this point

we probably do but it seems the majority are asymptomatic or recover after a brief illness. the key is that the hospitals are not being overwhelmed and we arent seeing mass deaths, which shows the populace has 1) developed immunity 2) the virus has mutated into a less dangerous strain..

our medical community on here can best tell us the conclusions.
 
Indian tests have become a joke ,apparently someone I know everytime they go to the hospital for the checkup along with his parent, they do covid checkup for both.

Also it has become a thing where people are fearing going to hospitals for covid due to people not coming back alive, seems to be easier to treat at home(if symptoms aren't severe).
 
Last edited:
Indian tests have become a joke ,apparently someone I know everytime they go to the hospital for the checkup along with his parent, they do covid checkup for both.

Also it has become a thing where people are fearing going to hospitals for covid due to people not coming back alive, seems to be easier to treat at home(if symptoms aren't severe).

the best advice is to stay at home if you have symptoms and only go to the hospital if they are severe. use masks and make sure you wash hands etc regularly.

what is the govt messaging like? state and fed? are the people maintaining discipline or is it typical apna desis who think everything is a hoax?
 
the best advice is to stay at home if you have symptoms and only go to the hospital if they are severe. use masks and make sure you wash hands etc regularly.

what is the govt messaging like? state and fed? are the people maintaining discipline or is it typical apna desis who think everything is a hoax?

My family(uncles,aunts) thought it was a hoax before they got it, everyone has luckily recovered though with only one person that went on Ventilator(recovered) and people are more careful now, even municipal govn emps are coming home putting the quarantine sticker but it's just affecting ppl above 65 a lot esp in cities.. and it's worse when they are going to hospital..(I don't want to be a conspiracy theorist but hospitals are thinking of it like a money making thing).

I know someone that went to a funeral and was laxed(doing rituals) and got the covid as well so I have to say its a mixed bag, but as far as I can see at the current strain of Covid Indians will end up having herd immunity the Swedish way (at cost of the elderly).
 
How is India managing to test at such a significant rate.

I feel pakisfan must have high casss foo but seems we have herd immunity at this point

The govt has ramped up Rapid Antigen Testing(RAT) to perform these tests at a very high frequency compared to say the US against the traditional RT-PCR tests.

Officially nation wide its about 30% of the total number of tests but in some of the major hotspots it can be even 50% or more.

Chances are these are less accurate and thats a big concern though, hence the spread may not be getting fully contained as of now.
 
Last edited:
The govt has ramped up Rapid Antigen Testing(RAT) to perform these tests at a very high frequency compared to say the US against the traditional RT-PCR tests.

Officially nation wide its about 30% of the total number of tests but in some of the major hotspots it can be even 50% or more.

Chances are these are less accurate and thats a big concern though, hence the spread may not be getting fully contained as of now.

There needs to be a metric for repeated tests on the same individual as well.
 
[MENTION=133135]kaayal[/MENTION] [MENTION=76058]cricketjoshila[/MENTION]
Roughly what % of daily tests is constituted by RAT and PCR in India?

I think RAT can give high number of false negatives. Is it really good enough wrt Covid?
 
[MENTION=133135]kaayal[/MENTION] [MENTION=76058]cricketjoshila[/MENTION]
Roughly what % of daily tests is constituted by RAT and PCR in India?

I think RAT can give high number of false negatives. Is it really good enough wrt Covid?


Some say 30 percent tests are RAT. RAT is mainly being done in hotspots on asymptomatic people. For symptomatic ones its RT PCR.

70 percent of nearly 900k tests is still 600k plus tests a day.
 
[MENTION=133135]kaayal[/MENTION] [MENTION=76058]cricketjoshila[/MENTION]
Roughly what % of daily tests is constituted by RAT and PCR in India?

I think RAT can give high number of false negatives. Is it really good enough wrt Covid?

I don’t know the real stat in the rest of India but in Kerala, almost 65% is RAT, TRU-NAT, CB-NAAT and the rest 35% is RT PCR.

Even if not that accurate, tests like rapid antigen tests if done repeatedly are the best weapon to control Covid transmission as per this modelling study. That is because a test result that comes after 3 days is useless for preventing disease transmission. India has taken up antigen tests in a big way very early and that it seems is good. Soon USA may follow.

https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2020.06.22.20136309v2.full.pdf
 
One in four Indians could have been infected with the coronavirus, lab head says

At least one in four people in India may have been infected with the coronavirus - a much higher number than official government figures suggest, the head of leading private laboratory says.

Dr. A. Velumani said an analysis of 270,000 antibody tests conducted by his company Thyrocare across India showed the presence of antibodies in an average of 26 percent of the people, indicating they had already been exposed to the coronavirus.

"This is a much higher percentage than we had expected. The presence of antibodies is uniform across all age groups, including children," Velumani told Reuters.
 
India reports record daily jump in coronavirus cases

India has reported a record jump in coronavirus cases.

The Health Ministry confirmed 69,652 cases on Thursday, and also reported 997 more deaths.

India's caseload is the third highest in the world after the US and Brazil.
 
India cases surge to 2.9 million

India hurtled toward the 3 million mark for coronavirus cases, reporting 68,898 new infections in the last 24 hours.

The total number of cases in the country now stands at 2.9 million. Deaths in the same period jumped by 983, with the total now at 54,849.
 
918k plus tests done on 19th august. 69k plus positive cases.

7.4 per cent positivity rate. This needs to be brought down to 5 Percent
 
There are stories going around that people with fever like symptoms, who are not actually Covid positive, are being admitted into hospitals so that they can be charged exhorbitant amounts for Covid treatment. How true is this?
 
There are stories going around that people with fever like symptoms, who are not actually Covid positive, are being admitted into hospitals so that they can be charged exhorbitant amounts for Covid treatment. How true is this?

My in-law's driver also said the same thing happened to someone in his locality. Said the guy had covid; took him in for a week; and then released after 1 week.

I doubt one can get rid of covid in 2 weeks. So, I have a feeling that they are scamming people. And this is BMC. Whats worse, they are doing this to those who are not so financially off.
 
We were once at 2nd spot, now at 6th.

Strange feeling. Feels great for us Delhites, however do not feel good when I see other states skyrocketing past us.
 
We were once at 2nd spot, now at 6th.

Strange feeling. Feels great for us Delhites, however do not feel good when I see other states skyrocketing past us.

Delhi population is significantly lower too as well so it was only a matter of time before rest were going to catch up. But they have flattened the curve it seems so good achievement nonetheless
 
Read that India may be heading towards herd immunity so might be the best solution even if it wasn't intentional. I think that was what IK had pretty much resigned himself to for Pakistan.
 
Delhi population is significantly lower too as well so it was only a matter of time before rest were going to catch up. But they have flattened the curve it seems so good achievement nonetheless
We may have lower population than other big states but our tests per million ratio is best in India. May be that's why our cases have already peaked.

OTOH, big states had tested very less for first 4 months and only now they have started testing aggressively and hence they've so easily gone past Delhi's numbers.
 
We were once at 2nd spot, now at 6th.

Strange feeling. Feels great for us Delhites, however do not feel good when I see other states skyrocketing past us.

Because Delhi probably has herd immunity now..
 
New Delhi: India recorded its biggest single-day jump in coronavirus cases with 69,878 new patients registered in the last 24 hours, the Union Health Ministry said this morning. The latest spike takes the India's tally to 29,75,701 cases. About 22.22 lakh people have recovered so far. Across India, 55,794 Covid-linked deaths have been registered so far; 945 patients have died since yesterday, according to the official data. The recovery rate stood at 74.69 per cent this morning. The country tested the highest number of samples on Friday - 10,23,836.

Source NDTV
 
India is about to reach 3m total confirmed cases of coronavirus, after a record single-day increase of more than 69,000.

The country has the third-highest number of infections in the world, after the US and Brazil. It also has the fourth-highest death toll.

However India's health ministry notes hat one million tests are being carried out every day, and that the rate of recovery had increased too.
 
India surpasses 3 million COVID-19 cases

India's coronavirus tally crossed the 3 million case mark, the country's health ministry said.

The country crossed that mark just 16 days after the number of cases crossed 2 million.

An update released by the health ministry showed the death toll stands at 56,706. In the last 24 hours, the country recorded close to 70,000 new cases.
 
There have now been more than three million confirmed cases of coronavirus in India.

The country has the third-highest number of total cases recorded after the US and Brazil, but it is reporting the highest daily number of new infections.

Of course India has a huge population of more than 1.3 billion people so that needs to be kept in mind when comparing its figures to other countries. However there are concerns about the relatively low amount of tests it has been carrying out.

While the situation is easing in areas that were initially badly hit, such as the capital, Delhi, new hot spots are emerging in other areas - such as Uttar Pradesh and Bihar in the north, and in southern Indian states.

In Bangalore, in the southern state of Karnataka, people have been telling the AFP news agency how the virus is impacting their lives.

"I am really scared," said a resident called Ramesh. "I am scared to go out, scared to go to the office. At home, my mother is a senior citizen aged about 67, my wife is pregnant, and we have a three-year-old child at home. I am really scared to go out."
 
On June 9, a minister in southern Karnataka state posted an infographic on Twitter showing the number of recorded COVID-19 infections in the city of Bengaluru were half that recorded in New Zealand, a country celebrated for getting the spread of the disease under control early on in the pandemic.

At the time, only about 450 cases of the novel coronavirus had been recorded among Bengaluru's 12.5 million people, compared with about 1,150 among New Zealand's 4.88 million population.

The city - which has more than double the population of New Zealand - "stumps the Kiwis", said the caption to the image posted by Minister for Medical Education of Karnataka Sudhakar K.

His tweet was liked and retweeted by thousands. But the celebration was short-lived.

Thanks partly to a high-tech testing and tracing system monitored by masked officials on giant screens in a city "war room", Bengaluru had contained the outbreak better than cities like Mumbai, which tallied more than 100 times as many cases.

Two and a half months on, Bengaluru, dubbed India's Silicon Valley for its technology firms and startups, has reported more than 110,000 cases. Where its infections in early June rose by approximately 25 a day, the daily infection rate is now more than 2,500. In New Zealand, the total caseload stood at 1,339 as of August 25.

Sudhakar did not respond to requests for comment, but his tweet remains online.

Bengaluru's early response was lauded by India's government as a model for its use of health surveys combined with efforts to tap technology expertise and cutting-edge software in order to analyse the spread of the disease.

But after India eased a nationwide lockdown in early June, epidemiologists and government officials involved in the city's response to the pandemic said they realised they had not planned enough.

The experience shows the extent of the challenge faced by large cities around the world, showing how rapidly an outbreak can snowball out of control.

"The city had three to four months to plan for a surge in cases, but the city did not plan for the future. They mostly assumed that the lockdown implementation was sufficient," said Giridhara Babu, an epidemiologist advising the state of Karnataka.

Curfew and contact-tracing

In late March, India enforced one of the world's strictest lockdowns. Karnataka state was ahead of that with its own measures.

It collaborated with the NASSCOM trade association to mobilise 150 employees from half a dozen IT firms to feed 20,000 international traveller records into a central system every day.

40,000 government health workers roamed the state in pink uniforms and masks, surveying nearly 16 million households.

Residents were subject to a curfew that emptied parks, malls and the city's notoriously clogged roads, and officials tapped companies such as Intel, Alphabet's Google and Mumbai-based Fractal Analytics for expertise and tools to help trace, predict and control the spread.

Many gave up their personal information for these purposes. At thousands of drugstores, officials collected contact details for people who bought drugs like paracetamol, to keep tabs on their health.

A federal government study shows Karnataka on average tested 47.4 contacts of every COVID-19-infected person between January 22 and April 30, compared with the national average of six contacts per infected individual.

'That many people'

But in June, when lockdown restrictions eased, people flocked back to markets that sell fresh produce and flowers.

Besides locals, officials say tens of thousands of travellers streamed in from Maharashtra and Tamil Nadu, many unwittingly bringing the virus with them. The neighbouring states have been the two worst hit by COVID-19 in India.

"We were sandwiched between these two states which already had a very high viral load ... so we were bound to get affected," said Pankaj Pandey, the health commissioner for Karnataka.

An estimated 45,000 people from Maharashtra and another 20,000 from Tamil Nadu's capital, Chennai, streamed into Bengaluru in June, he added.

"In the initial phase, the case numbers in Bangalore [currently named Bengaluru] were so few, that people all over the country felt Bangalore is the safest. That may also have caused people to 'reverse-migrate' back to Bangalore," said one official involved in Bengaluru's response.

"We didn't look at the inbound travellers as a major source of infections," the official said. "We never anticipated that many people would come."

Officials from Bengaluru's municipal body, the Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike (BBMP), did not respond to queries on whether it failed to address gaps in its modelling systems.

But Hephsiba Rani Korlapati, a bureaucrat running the Bengaluru "war room" said easing the lockdown complicated the city's efforts.

Since late June, Bengaluru has been sealing areas where cases jump, said Korlapati, noting this involves placing barricades at entry and exit points - in effect quarantining entire neighbourhoods.

"Aggressive testing of contacts and home isolation is the way to contain the spread," she said. "That is being taken very seriously and is being done right now."

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020...-covid-19-success-undone-200826041651556.html
 
Delhi doubles tests to 40,000 a day as cases surge

Delhi's Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal has announced that the number of coronavirus tests carried out there has doubled to 40,000 per day, as the Indian capital recorded more than 1,500 new cases on Tuesday - its highest total this month so far.

However, Kejriwal said the situation was "fully under control".

Nationally, India recorded more than 67,000 new cases in the past 24 hours, bringing its total number of confirmed cases up to more than 3.2 million.

India has the third-highest number of cases, after the US and Brazil. However, its total death toll - 59,449 - is much lower than these two countries.
 
One big difference between Pakistan and India has been the super strict lockdown that India imposed which led to mass migration to smaller towns and villages and these people spread the virus to all nook and corner of India. Meanwhile Pakistan didn't take the route of strict lockdown and therefore there was minimal migration. Heck some of second tier cities never saw more than a 100 cases, and majority of rural areas were also spared from the spread. To my medically untrained mind this seems like a possible cause of why herd immunity kicked in Pakistan and not yet in India.
 
One big difference between Pakistan and India has been the super strict lockdown that India imposed which led to mass migration to smaller towns and villages and these people spread the virus to all nook and corner of India. Meanwhile Pakistan didn't take the route of strict lockdown and therefore there was minimal migration. Heck some of second tier cities never saw more than a 100 cases, and majority of rural areas were also spared from the spread. To my medically untrained mind this seems like a possible cause of why herd immunity kicked in Pakistan and not yet in India.

One specific country or globally, there is no herd immunity and there will never be. Let's forget about it.
 
One big difference between Pakistan and India has been the super strict lockdown that India imposed which led to mass migration to smaller towns and villages and these people spread the virus to all nook and corner of India. Meanwhile Pakistan didn't take the route of strict lockdown and therefore there was minimal migration. Heck some of second tier cities never saw more than a 100 cases, and majority of rural areas were also spared from the spread. To my medically untrained mind this seems like a possible cause of why herd immunity kicked in Pakistan and not yet in India.
Don't know whether its herd immunity or not but lockdown in India has to be one of the most idiotically thought out move. And there is no dearth of such gigantically idiotic moves under this dispensation.

We had such a strict lockdown when there were hardly 500-1000 cases on daily basis while everything is moving so freely these days and we are seeing 70K cases on daily basis.

To ask migrants to stay where they were, was a move laced with complete thoughtlessness. No wonder there have been so many cases from villages during last few months.
 
can some of our Indian friends describe what the aftermath of this disease on the fabric of Indian society look like? It could have profound effects in the UK but I would like to know what Indians think?
 
Coronavirus hits isolated Indian island tribe

Ten members of India's dwindling Great Andamanese tribe have tested positive for the coronavirus, officials said, fuelling concerns about the safety of the group and other Indigenous people in the remote archipelago.

Of the 10, six have recovered and have been put in home quarantine, while the rest are undergoing treatment in a local hospital, officials told AFP.

Only slightly more than 50 Great Andamanese people survive today and live on the tiny Strait Island where the Indian government looks after their food and shelter.
 
Coronavirus hits isolated Indian island tribe

Ten members of India's dwindling Great Andamanese tribe have tested positive for the coronavirus, officials said, fuelling concerns about the safety of the group and other Indigenous people in the remote archipelago.

Of the 10, six have recovered and have been put in home quarantine, while the rest are undergoing treatment in a local hospital, officials told AFP.

Only slightly more than 50 Great Andamanese people survive today and live on the tiny Strait Island where the Indian government looks after their food and shelter.

Unfortunate this.. hopefully they immune system can take it..
 
Hundreds of masked protesters demonstrated in big Indian cities on Friday against a government plan to hold exams for millions of students during the coronavirus pandemic, as the daily tally of infections hit a record high.

The health ministry reported 77,266 infections, taking the nation's tally to 3.3 million, with 61,529 related deaths. India, with the most infections in Asia, has posted the highest single-day increase worldwide every day since August 7.

"Stop the exam during the pandemic," read one placard carried by protesters in the eastern city of Kolkata, while others scuffled briefly with police in the western industrial city of Ahmedabad.

More than 2.4 million students are set to take tests next week for admission to medical and engineering schools, which the federal government has declined to defer, despite growing pressure from students and opposition parties.

"It's important that the government listens to students," Rahul Gandhi, a leader of the opposition Congress party, said in a video on social media, as he urged no compromises on the safety of students.

Usually held in April and May, the exams have already been postponed twice this year.

But some students want another delay for fear of rising infections as well as difficulty travelling to exam centres because of virus-linked curbs on transport and lockdowns in some areas.

However, further delays risk costing students the academic year, Education Minister Ramesh Pokhriyal told the Times of India newspaper.

As infections unfurl outwards from crowded cities into sprawling rural areas, health officials have launched the second round of a nationwide survey to assess the spread.

It will screen for antibodies in 28,000 people across 70 districts, yielding results by late September, said Manoj Murhekar, director of the National Institute of Epidemiology.

"The survey will tell us what proportion of the rural population is also exposed to the virus," he added.

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020...-india-virus-cases-surge-200828110739265.html
 
India is struggling to contain the spread of the novel coronavirus, with its total number of cases having now surged past the three million mark.

It is the third-worst affected country hit by the virus after the United States and Brazil.

But, for the past three weeks, the South Asian nation has been reporting the world's highest daily new infections.

On Friday, the health ministry reported a record jump of 77,266 cases and 1,057 related deaths over the past 24 hours.

"India is at a precarious stage in the containment and management of the COVID-19 epidemic. The total number of COVID-19 cases in the country has been increasing undaunted," Sanghmitra Sheel Acharya, a professor at the Centre of Social Medicine and Community Health at New Delhi's Jawaharlal Nehru University, told Al Jazeera.

What is leading to the record rise and why has India struggled to flatten the coronavirus curve?

Here are five things to know:

Mass rapid testing
Health authorities have ramped up testing across the country by nearly five-folds within two months.

More than 39 million cumulative tests have been conducted so far, according to the Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR), with an average of 800,000 samples being taken on a daily basis.

In the capital, New Delhi, the chief minister said testing will be doubled from 20,000 to 40,000 tests a day within a week.

Dr Poonam Khetrapal Singh, regional director at the World Health Organization's (WHO) Southeast Asia office, said the increased surveillance was contributing to the surge in numbers.

"Over the last few weeks, testing has been rapidly scaled up across the country," Singh told Al Jazeera.

Since June, several states have authorised the use of cheaper and less accurate rapid antigen testing kits.

This testing technique is faster than most standard PCR tests and many do not require a lab for processing or any specialised equipment or trained personnel.

But health experts have raised concern that the antigen tests - which test for the viral proteins - can miss infections and and lead to false negatives, contributing to the spread of the virus in hard-hit areas.

Low death rate
India's case death rate - the number of deaths among the positive cases - has remained relatively low. It is currently at less than 2 percent.

Similar trends have been observed in other South Asian countries, including Pakistan, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka.

But some experts have questioned whether deaths are being accurately documented in India, with as many as 78 percent of deaths not being medically certified under normal circumstances.

The recovery rate is nearly 76 percent, with more than 2.5 million people recovered among the 3.3 million cases registered.

Flattening the curve
Since early August, India has been reporting the world's highest single-day infections - between the 60,000 to 70,000 case range.

Its three-million-case milestone on Sunday came just 17 days after it crossed the two million mark.

The virus is spreading particularly rapidly in the rural areas - where two-thirds of the country's 1.3 billion population lives.

Lockdown restrictions have been eased and businesses reopened in most parts of the country. People are seen not wearing masks in public places or practising physical distancing.

Acharya from JNU said despite the country's efforts and comparison to the devastation caused by the pandemic in the developed countries, India has "not managed to flatten the curve".

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020/08/india-precarious-coronavirus-crisis-200828054803229.html
 
India’s case trajectory tops US Covid-19 peak

New Delhi ’s trajectory of daily cases of the coronavirus disease (Covid-19) on Friday became the highest ever recorded by any country, which means that the outbreak in the country currently is worse than it was at the peak in the United States (US) – the worst-hit nation in the world.

At an average, 69,558 new cases were reported in India every day over the past week, placing it above the seven-day daily case peak recorded in the US when the number touched 69,330 for the week ending July 25. The US’s trajectory was the worst in the world in the eight months since the coronavirus disease surfaced in December 2019.

On Friday, India reported 76,139 new cases of Covid-19, taking the total number of cases in the country to 3,458,186. To be sure, the US has over six million confirmed infections, more than 1.8 times those in India, which is unlikely to overtake America any time soon.

Brazil, which is the country with the second-highest number of total cases, has around 350,000 more cases than India. The South American nation, however, has been adding around 30,000 fewer cases than India every day recently, so the latter has been closing the gap fast.

_c1bc6da6-e95b-11ea-98f7-bd84aa0e920b.png


New cases in India have been rising at an alarming rate and have shown no signs of a let-up. India’s doubling rate — the rate at which the total cases in the country would double — was 32 days on Friday against 96 days in the US and 68 in Brazil. For doubling rates, a higher number mean rising at an alarming rate and have shown no signs of a let-up. India’s doubling rate — the rate at which the total cases in the country would double — was 32 days on Friday against 96 days in the US and 68 in Brazil. For doubling rates, a higher number means cases are growing at a slower (thus better) rate. In fact, India has the worst doubling rate among the world’s 10 worst-hit nations.

However, with 62,703 total deaths as of Friday, India’s case fatality rate (CFR) – the proportion of deaths among the confirmed cases — is 1.8%, which is not only much better than the global average of 3.4%, but also better than the US (3.1%) and Brazil (3.2%).

Read more:

ABRUPT vs STEADY TRAJECTORIES

The US became the worst-hit nation in the world on the back of two separate and massive case spikes. The first spike, which was milder, peaked towards early April and was centred in the country’s north-east with states such as New York, Massachusetts and Pennsylvania reporting high cases.

Towards the end of June, a second spike started with new epicentres such as California, Texas and Florida, pushing new cases to record highs again. In this phase, the US set the global record for the highest cases in a single day on July 24 when it reported 78,586 infections. The country’s seven-day average peaked a day later on July 25. Since then, this wave of infections has also waned and the country is currently reporting around 42,000 new cases every day.

In Brazil, the trajectory has been the most erratic of these three. It has seen smaller waves of infections that have dropped thrice — in mid-June, mid-July and mid-August. However, cases appear to have hit a plateau in the past two weeks, averaging around 37,000 new cases every day, against over 46,000 in the last week of July.

Unlike the other two nations where the new case trend lines are uneven, the caseload in India has grown gradually and has not had any abrupt spike. But this does not necessarily translate to good news because it also means that the trajectory in India has never hit a plateau. With almost all states (except Delhi) reporting record high cases over the past few weeks, this trajectory has not yet exhibited any signs of slowing down.

To be sure, the three countries are rather similar demographically, which may explain the extended trajectory of the pandemic. The US is the world’s third largest country by geographical area, Brazil fifth, and India seventh. As the infection wanes in one part of the country, it waxes in another. In terms of population, India is the second most populous country in the world, the US third, and Brazil sixth. Expectedly, per capita infection and death numbers are low for all three countries compared to smaller and less populous nations.
https://www.hindustantimes.com/indi...vid-19-peak/story-nYxoxQ8jd1NJX5xBxKhhxK.html
 
If Indians avoided social gatherings with as much efficiency and consistency as they avoid this thread, then perhaps the case count wouldn’t be going up so much everyday :))

Tho in all seriousness. The US mismanaged it like anything and to surpass them (even with population size) is really worrying. I hope the results in India come out faster than the US tho. In us one of the problems has been that the results come out in two days so by the time a positive test is know the individual has already infected several other people
 
Rushing from one home to another in a village in western India, health worker Ashwini Mhaske cannot afford to take a breather.

Working to keep COVID-19 at bay while caring for mothers and babies, Mhaske races between households to meet job targets and earn bonuses for an average monthly wage of 4,000 rupees ($54) that India's army of rural health workers say is derisory.

Accredited Social Health Activists - or ASHA workers - are the government's recognised health workers who are usually the first point of contact in rural India, where there is often limited or no direct access to healthcare facilities.

Many of India's one million all-female ASHA workers - who have conducted door-to-door checks to trace coronavirus patients in addition to their usual duties - went on strike this month to demand job recognition, better pay and proper protective gear.

"Now we work all hours, with no days off," said 33-year-old Mhaske, who used to do farm work shifts to supplement her ASHA income before the coronavirus pandemic struck India in March.

India's coronavirus cases crossed the 3.2 million mark this week - it is third in the world behind the United States and Brazil - after a surge in rural areas where two-thirds of its 1.3 billion people live.

With infections spreading further to small towns and remote regions, experts say the epidemic in India is likely to be months away from its peak, putting more strain on an already overburdened healthcare system and struggling ASHA workers.

"All we [ASHA workers] are saying is that the government should think about us," Mhaske told the Thomson Reuters Foundation by phone from Osmanabad in Maharashtra state.

Pay dispute
Enlisted as part of a 2005 national programme to boost healthcare services across rural India - from maternal care to vaccination drives - ASHA workers are treated like volunteers and not covered by state governments' minimum wage legislation.

They recently received a 33 percent raise to their basic monthly salary due to the pandemic, and get bonuses for extra tasks, for example, they receive 50 rupees ($0.50) for ensuring five children are immunised and 600 rupees ($8) for taking pregnant women to hospital to give birth.

Yet labour economists and campaigners said ASHA workers were still hugely underpaid for their duties, and earned about half as much as farmworkers employed under government job schemes.

"In the name of community service, they are working without commensurate remuneration or rights," said KR Shyam Sunder, a professor at the Xavier School of Management in Jharkhand.

"This amounts to indignity or undignified labour ... the returns to the society from their work will far outweigh the meagre economic cost in regularising them."

India's health ministry has not officially responded to ASHA workers' demands for a base salary of 10,000 rupees ($136) a month.

"They get task-based incentives and we already have a set of incentives ... that would yield 5,000 to 6,000 rupees ($68-$82) a month," said Vikas Sheel, joint secretary at the health ministry.

Yet payment records reviewed by the Thomson Reuters Foundation of nearly 600 ASHA workers from four states - Maharashtra, Bihar, Uttar Pradesh and Madhya Pradesh - revealed average earnings of about 4,000 rupees ($55) for the month of July.

"We have already increased 1,000 rupees ($14) for their COVID-19 duties," Sheel added. "Right now, that's it."

Sheel said individual states had the discretion to boost the earnings of local ASHA workers and some states had done so.

"But there isn't one clear payment structure for the whole country," said Ranjana Nirula, convener of the All India Coordination Committee of ASHA Workers, which is a union.

"This is part of unpaid labour of women and is seen as an extension of the work women do at home."

Several ASHA workers said they work around the clock and had been on call at all hours since March - when millions of migrant workers returned to their villages from cities post-lockdown.

The health workers recorded every arrival, took travel histories and helped place the labourers into quarantine, all while carrying out their maternal and child healthcare duties.

Leela Devi Rawat, a 30-year-old ASHA worker in Udaipur in northwest Rajasthan state, said she was exhausted due to her new responsibilities yet had no choice but to keep working.

"How do I run my house if I quit? My husband takes up daily wage work but has had no earnings in lockdown," she said.

Payment records for 195 workers in Maharashtra seen by the Thomson Reuters Foundation showed average earnings of 4,156 rupees ($57) in July - an increase of 60 rupees ($0.82) from February despite the 1,000 rupees ($14) wage increase that was implemented in March.

Workers said their coronavirus duties meant they had little time to carry out other tasks that awarded them bonus payments.

"Asha workers have emerged as the backbone of primary healthcare in India," said physician Abhay Bang, founder of the public health non-profit, Search.

"Over the years, their work has gone from part-time to full-time," he said, adding that their average workday was at least 12 hours. "You call them community workers, so you don't give them government wages. But you keep full control over them."

The Indian government and Prime Minister Narendra Modi have hailed the ASHA workers in recent months for their role in containing the epidemic in India.

Yet such praise means little to many ASHA workers as their workdays get longer while their pay remains roughly the same.

"I hope the payment will improve and maybe I will grow professionally," said Mhaske, who recently enrolled in a computing course to widen her career prospects.

"I hope that someday it will be better."

https://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/f...women-health-workers-gov-200828080550727.html
 
India records another surge in daily coronavirus cases

India reported 76,472 new coronavirus cases, slightly lower than the record breaking numbers of the past couple of days, but extending a run that has made the country's outbreak currently the world's worst.

India has reported a total of 3.46 million cases during the pandemic, a tally that places them behind the United States and Brazil in terms of total caseload.

However, the south Asian country has reported higher single-day case rises than both those countries for almost two weeks.

India's death toll rose by 1,021 to 62,550, data from the federal health ministry showed, even as local media reported that some nationwide restrictions on travel could be eased from next week.

The western Indian state of Maharashtra, home to India's financial capital Mumbai, recorded 331 fatalities, the steepest single-day increase among all states over the past two days.
 
India are about to overtake Brazil in terms of total cases.

How come they got it so bad? Other South Asian countries didn't get it so badly.
 
If Indians avoided social gatherings with as much efficiency and consistency as they avoid this thread, then perhaps the case count wouldn’t be going up so much everyday :))

Tho in all seriousness. The US mismanaged it like anything and to surpass them (even with population size) is really worrying. I hope the results in India come out faster than the US tho. In us one of the problems has been that the results come out in two days so by the time a positive test is know the individual has already infected several other people

People here dont care anymore mate. Noone is concerned with the counts rising and pretty much its a non issue for the general public after the lockdown has been removed.
 
You Locked Down Whole Country, Now Give Relief: Supreme Court To Centre

Top court was hearing petitions that wanted waiver of interest on loan repayment during moratorium period, announced due to the coronavirus lockdown.

The Supreme Court on Wednesday sought the government's stand on waiving interest on loan repayments during the moratorium and said it "cannot hide" behind the Reserve Bank of India (RBI). Reacting sharply to the centre's comment that the move would hit businesses and banks, the Supreme Court said: "This happened because you locked down the entire country."

The Supreme Court has asked the government to make its stand clear by September 1 on a petition that asks that interest on loan repayment in the moratorium during the coronavirus lockdown be cancelled. The court said the centre had not clarified its stand even though it has "ample powers" under the Disaster Management Act to grant the waiver.

"There cannot be a solution which is one-size fits all," Solicitor General Tushar Mehta said.

"You cannot be interested only in business and not about sufferings of people," the Supreme Court said, noting that the matter had been hanging for a long time.

"The problem has been created by your (centre's) lockdown. This is also not the time to consider about the business. The plight of people has to be considered also. You have to tell us your stand on two things: disaster management act and if the interest on interest will be accounted for," said Justice Ashok Bhushan.


The petitioners wanted some portion of an RBI notification issued on March 27 to be cancelled so that interest could be waived. They said the interest creates hardship, hindrances and objection in right to life guaranteed under the constitution.

https://www.ndtv.com/business/supre...g-interest-on-loans-during-moratorium-2285443
 
Because we have other priorities like building temples, knowing how SSR committed suicide etc.
Looks like there are no other events happening in India that is why news channels like Times Now and Republic are only showing news related to Sushant's death. We all know they don't give a damn about a bihari actor. Since it has happened in a state where BJP is not in power they are trying to give it as much spotlight as possible.

These C grade gutter news channels will never talk about indian economy, what kashmiris are going through, crimes happening in other parts of India but have time to discuss Sushant's case all day long. Doordarshan gives a better news in half an hour than these cheap news channels give in 1 month. :inti
 
Looks like there are no other events happening in India that is why news channels like Times Now and Republic are only showing news related to Sushant's death. We all know they don't give a damn about a bihari actor. Since it has happened in a state where BJP is not in power they are trying to give it as much spotlight as possible.

These C grade gutter news channels will never talk about indian economy, what kashmiris are going through, crimes happening in other parts of India but have time to discuss Sushant's case all day long. Doordarshan gives a better news in half an hour than these cheap news channels give in 1 month. :inti
Had Bihar elections not round the corner and Nitish Kumar not being so dire during last 15 years, these gutter level channels won't have cared one bit for SSR.

Looks like only thing which matters in India for last month or so is suicide of SSR. So many are dying of Covid on daily basis, Kashmiris are in such pathetic condition for last year or so, however doesn't matter to these TRP hungry channels.
 
India to reopen underground train networks even as cases jump

India will reopen underground train networks and allow sports and religious events in a limited manner from next month even as coronavirus cases jump.

India reported 76,472 new coronavirus cases, slightly lower than the numbers seen in the last few of days, but continuing a run that has made the country's outbreak currently the worst in the world.

The train network, a lifeline for millions in the capital city of New Delhi, will be reopened in a phased manner from September 7, the federal home ministry said.

Social, academic, sports and religious events will be permissible with a maximum of 100 people from September 21, it said.
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">India is in denial about the COVID-19 crisis. The country is headed for disaster as the pandemic devastates health services and livelihoods | Analysis <a href="https://t.co/QLF6sQGJx9">https://t.co/QLF6sQGJx9</a> <a href="https://t.co/NGRLtYWK5K">pic.twitter.com/NGRLtYWK5K</a></p>— Scientific American (@sciam) <a href="https://twitter.com/sciam/status/1298352800339046403?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">August 25, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
Last edited by a moderator:
so some indians are saying they dont care about the covid cases in India, if it was Pakistan thn the Pakistani thread will be spammed by Indians after every minute.

No Indian "doctor" is interested in this thread to tell what the hell is going on in India .....
 
so some indians are saying they dont care about the covid cases in India, if it was Pakistan thn the Pakistani thread will be spammed by Indians after every minute.

No Indian "doctor" is interested in this thread to tell what the hell is going on in India .....

They are about to become #2 in the world in terms of total cases.

I am shocked that they are not taking things seriously. They are losing 1000+ people daily.
 
We set a world record, 79K cases yesterday.

Does anyone care though?
 
Coronavirus Cases in India: India is the third worst-hit country by the coronavirus pandemic.

New Delhi: A record surge of 78,761 fresh coronavirus cases in the last 24 hours took India's Covid tally past 35 lakh, the Union Health Ministry said this morning. This is the highest single-day jump in Covid infections reported by any country since the beginning of the pandemic. The US set the previous record on July 17 with 77,638 daily cases, according to an AFP tally. In the last 24 hours, 948 deaths linked to the highly contagious disease were registered, taking the total number of fatalities to 63,498. About 27 lakh people have recovered so far; the recovery rate stood at 76.6 per cent this morning.

https://www.ndtv.com/india-news/cor...6-6-recovery-rate-2287506?pfrom=home-bigstory
 
They are about to become #2 in the world in terms of total cases.

I am shocked that they are not taking things seriously. They are losing 1000+ people daily.

How many are Bangladesh or pakistan testing in a day? 100k? 200k?

If test less we will get far lesser cases as mild cases will go undiagnosed. Right now almost anyone with even the mildest symptoms can go and get tested for free in a govt hospital or for as low as Inr 2200 in a pvt lab.

What is the test per million stats for other south Asian countries?
 
They are about to become #2 in the world in terms of total cases.

I am shocked that they are not taking things seriously. They are losing 1000+ people daily.

Define how to be serious.

Define what you would have done in this case if you were given the power.

Define what negligence you know about Indian system that you have solutions to eradicate.

Define what you know about how the state govt are handling the cases since you assumed that everyone is an ignorant.

Define what you know about the Indian doctors, nurse, health workers, urban and national financial institutions, business, factories are running for which the system is still functioning even with this much panic.

People sitting in arm chair is criticizing the system because media is focusing too much on entertainment.

Guess what? Country doesn't run on what is portrayal on media. The govt organization, banks, industries have specific SOPs designated for what to do and NOT to do.

Did you read any of these SOPs? I guess not.

If you haven't even read the SOPs, you don't even have clue about how the system is functioning and yet you are criticizing by just seeing the numbers....

Lack of knowledge is not a crime. But when you pass verdicts on based upon it, that is a different ball game.
 
As the global number of cases passes 25 million, India has set a new world record for the highest number of new infections reported in 24 hours.

The country, which is the world's second most populous with 1.3 billion people, reported 78,761 cases in one day.

It also reported 63,000 deaths from the virus since the pandemic began.

India has now recorded 3.5 million cases in total, behind Brazil and the US.

Officials say India's comparatively low rate of testing also means it is not capturing the full impact of the virus.

"Testing per million in India at 30,000 remains the second lowest in top 10 (virus-infected) countries. Mexico is lowest at about 10,000," virologist Shahid Jameel told AFP news agency.
 
Define how to be serious.

Define what you would have done in this case if you were given the power.

Define what negligence you know about Indian system that you have solutions to eradicate.

Define what you know about how the state govt are handling the cases since you assumed that everyone is an ignorant.

Define what you know about the Indian doctors, nurse, health workers, urban and national financial institutions, business, factories are running for which the system is still functioning even with this much panic.

People sitting in arm chair is criticizing the system because media is focusing too much on entertainment.

Guess what? Country doesn't run on what is portrayal on media. The govt organization, banks, industries have specific SOPs designated for what to do and NOT to do.

Did you read any of these SOPs? I guess not.

If you haven't even read the SOPs, you don't even have clue about how the system is functioning and yet you are criticizing by just seeing the numbers....

Lack of knowledge is not a crime. But when you pass verdicts on based upon it, that is a different ball game.

LOL. You got triggered.

Well, your country's response has been bad. Result is for all to see.
 
How many are Bangladesh or pakistan testing in a day? 100k? 200k?

If test less we will get far lesser cases as mild cases will go undiagnosed. Right now almost anyone with even the mildest symptoms can go and get tested for free in a govt hospital or for as low as Inr 2200 in a pvt lab.

What is the test per million stats for other south Asian countries?

It is not just about total cases. It is also about death rate.

So, are you saying you are happy with how things have gone?
 
Last edited:
LOL. You got triggered.

Well, your country's response has been bad. Result is for all to see.

You've lost the humanity touch which you did carry initially.

Even Pakistani posters are not laughing in these kind of threads.

Above post was a disappointment. But each on his own. Carry on.
 
You've lost the humanity touch which you did carry initially.

Even Pakistani posters are not laughing in these kind of threads.

Above post was a disappointment. But each on his own. Carry on.

I was laughing at the fact you got defensive. Not for the death count.
 
How many are Bangladesh or pakistan testing in a day? 100k? 200k?

If test less we will get far lesser cases as mild cases will go undiagnosed. Right now almost anyone with even the mildest symptoms can go and get tested for free in a govt hospital or for as low as Inr 2200 in a pvt lab.

What is the test per million stats for other south Asian countries?

Pakistan has about 11,800 tests per million compared to India’s almost 30,000 so it’s almost 3 times. However the multiple between the number of cases or number of deaths is several times higher

When the deaths mount up it’s impossible to hide and it strains the system as pakistan found in June. It’s not a competition obv but regardless of the testing rate Pakistan’s trajectory has been on the better direction during the summer.

Another thing which I see is that corona has spread to India villages and small towns which thankfully didn’t happen in Pakistan.

Hopefully India gets out of it soon.
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">India is in denial about the COVID-19 crisis. The country is headed for disaster as the pandemic devastates health services and livelihoods | Analysis <a href="https://t.co/QLF6sQGJx9">https://t.co/QLF6sQGJx9</a> <a href="https://t.co/NGRLtYWK5K">pic.twitter.com/NGRLtYWK5K</a></p>— Scientific American (@sciam) <a href="https://twitter.com/sciam/status/1298352800339046403?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">August 25, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>

“silver lining is that, for reasons that are as yet unclear, COVID-19 mortality in India seems relatively low. The same surveys suggest that the infection-fatality rate (IFR) may be as low as one per thousand. If so, India may not be heading towards a major mortality crisis, or rather a major crisis of COVID-19 mortality, at least relative to normal levels of mortality. COVID-19 deaths so far add up to less than 1 percent of annual deaths from all causes in India. Per million population, there have been just 38 so far, compared with more than 500 in the US.”

I guess the strain is diff, we would be in issues if it mutates..
 
You've lost the humanity touch which you did carry initially.

Even Pakistani posters are not laughing in these kind of threads.

Above post was a disappointment. But each on his own. Carry on.

Sorry but you are quite dumb. He wasn't laughing at coronavirus cases but actually at your stupidity. Testing is not the only thing you should look at. Death rate is the real concern. Just because a Bangladeshi is stating the obvious here you don't have to act defensive here. :inti
 
Back
Top