Saturday, March 14, 2020

India Is the World's Second-Most Populous Country. Can It Handle the Coronavirus Outbreak?

Travelers wear masks as a preventative measure against coronavirus at a Railway Station in Guwahati in India on March 12.
Travelers wear masks as a preventative measure against coronavirus at a Railway Station in Guwahati in India on March 12.
Anuwar Ali Hazarika—Barcroft Studios/Getty Images
March 12, 2020
As the world grapples with the COVID-19 pandemic, some experts say India — a country of more than 1.3 billion people — likely has many more cases than the conservative numbers currently being reported. The outbreak of the new coronavirus, which causes COVID-19, began in China and has since infected more than 124,000 people across more than 110 countries and territories around the world. More than 4,500 people worldwide have died after being infected with COVID-19.
India has conducted nearly 5,000 COVID-19 tests so far, according to the World Health Organization, which says that the “country is responding with urgency as well as transparency.” But so far, India has only reported 74 confirmed COVID-19 cases and one death, on Thursday. Dr. Ashish Jha, director of the Harvard Global Health Institute tells TIME that count is “just not right.” He believes there must be many more cases, but they have just not been identified. “I’m deeply worried that there’s a lot of community transmission and we are just not aware of it because there is not widespread testing,” he says.
Jha expects there will be a large uptick in cases over the next two to three weeks as testing capabilities improve. Jha and other experts worry that misinformation from government officials and BJP lawmakers touting cow products and unproven homeopathic remedies as ways to prevent infection add to the country’s challenges in containing an outbreak.

World Health Organization Declares COVID-19 a 'Pandemic'
The World Health Organization (WHO) on March 11 declared COVID-19 a pandemic, pointing to the over 118,000 cases of the coronavirus illness in over 110 countries and territories around the world and the sustained risk of further global spread.
Analysts also say that enacting strict social distancing measures, like the widespread lockdowns and quarantines used in Italy and China, would be almost impossible in India’s many rural and overcrowded regions. Those living in poverty would likely be among the hardest hit in a potential widespread outbreak as much of India’s privatized health care system is expensive and public hospitals are overwhelmed and often sub-par.
Here’s what to know about how prepared India is for a major COVID-19 outbreak.

How is India responding?

The Indian government has recommended residents avoid or postpone mass gatherings until the spread of COVID-19 is contained. The Ministry of External Affairs has advised against conducting the Indian Premier League, a popular global cricket tournament, but noted that the final decision will rest with organizers.
Only government-run hospitals administer the COVID-19 test, which is free, according to Quartz. At least 52 labs across India can test for COVID-19, according to the WHO.
Experts say India’s responses to previous disease outbreaks have been relatively strong. When Ebola hit West Africa in 2014, India developed some good testing centers and protocols, Jha notes. When Nipah, a virus with a mortality rate around 95%, hit Kerala in 2018, the human-to-human transmission was contained, although 17 people died. But Nipah was significantly more localized than COVID-19. Containing the new coronavirus is significantly more complicated than responding to Nipah and Ebola and requires a more sophisticated response from the public health system, especially because COVID-19 has flu-like symptoms and is sometimes asymptomatic, Jha adds.
Keep up to date with our daily coronavirus newsletter by clicking here.

India’s travel restrictions

On Wednesday, India announced the suspension of “all existing visas”until April 15, apart from certain special exemptions, diplomatic and employment visas among them. The change will not apply to foreigners already in India but no more tourists will be able to enter starting on Friday at 12 p.m. GMT from the port of departure.
All incoming travelers to the country, including Indians, who visited China, Italy, Iran, the Republic of Korea, France, Spain or Germany after Feb. 15 would be quarantined for at least 14 days, authorities said on Wednesday. The Indian army is setting up quarantine facilities across India to house about 1,500 people, according to national media. Bellur Prabhakar, Senior Associate Dean for Research and professor of microbiology and immunology at the University of Illinois College of Medicine, tells TIME that this is an extremely small amount given India’s population.
More than 1 million passengers have so far been screened at airports, according to health officials.
Indian citizens have been advised to avoid all non-essential travel abroad and India’s government says it has so far evacuated more than 900 people from COVID-19 affected countries, including Iran, China and Japan.

Health care challenges

Jha notes that while he was concerned about the relatively high volume of travel to and from China and Iran, now community spread is more likely to drive a national epidemic than foreign cases.

Spotlight Story
Why Overreacting to the Threat of the Coronavirus May Be Rational
The problem with COVID-19 is that it’s unclear what to do.
Experts say that elderly individuals with underlying health conditions are most at-risk to a COVID-19 infection. There is a high prevalence of cardiovascular disease and diabetes in India, notes Prabhakar. Another less obvious threat is the “extraordinarily poor quality of air” in urban centers, which can cause respiratory disease. “One of the first lines of defense we have before our immune system kicks in is our respiratory tract’s ability to shut the virus [down] or to push it out but if those underlying conditions are compromised you are going to be much more vulnerable to respiratory infections” like COVID-19, Prabhakar says.
One particularly vulnerable community are those in poverty, especially because private health care is expensive and inaccessible to many while public hospitals lag behind in quality. About 176 million Indians were living in extreme poverty as of 2015, according to a World Bank brief from last year.
India likely lacks enough hospital beds for the number of people likely to be infected, Jha says. But beyond a question of hospital capacity is a question of trust in the public health system. Many public hospitals in India are overcrowded, lack staff, and Jha says patients have shared concerns with him about being treated badly at public hospitals — an experience that may lessen their chances of willing to go again.
The key to managing the COVID-19 outbreak is to identify people with symptoms early so they can be isolated but often people don’t come forward until they have advanced symptoms and have spread the disease. “The only way they will come early is if they think you can do something for them,” Jha says. “I can imagine in rural areas with a weak primary health care infrastructure people are not going to come forward because they’re not convinced that coming forward will mean much.”
Experts also believe that extreme social distancing measures like those taken by China and Italy, which has quarantined the entire country of 60 million people, is not “remotely possible in India” because of the large number of people who live in slums and crowded conditions. Data from India’s 2011 national census indicates that one in six urban Indians live in cramped slum housing conditions, according to The Guardian.
India has a remarkably dense population and there is overcrowding on public transport as well as public spaces, like markets, Prabhakar notes. “A bus that is supposed to carry 40 passengers will have 80 passengers,” he says.
Health department officials and police personnel seen wearing masks while conducting a mock drill in which doctors educated people about COVID-19 on March 12, 2020 in Amritsar, India.
Health department officials and police personnel seen wearing masks while conducting a mock drill in which doctors educated people about COVID-19 on March 12, 2020 in Amritsar, India.
Sameer Sehgal/Hindustan Times—Getty Images

Government-sponsored misinformation

Misconceptions about the coronavirus are sweeping through the country primarily through Whatsapp, but also with the help of the right-wing Hindu nationalist government. In January, the Indian government through the Ministry of AYUSH, which promotes alternative forms of medicine, published questionable advisories about homeopathy and unani (a type of herbal practice) as ways to prevent coronavirus infection. Homeopathy has been widely dismissed by public health experts as not being effective for any health condition.
The Indian fact-checking website Alt News determined the government’s claims were “false” and “dangerous.” “The homeopathic drug ‘Arsenicum album 30’ cannot prevent a COVID-19 infection as claimed by the Ministry of AYUSH,” said Sumaiya Shaikh, a neuroscientist working in Sweden and science fact-checker for Indian fact-checking agency Alt News, in a post on the website after reviewing research papers on the drug. Shaikh tells TIME that she found an “immense number of faults” in these studies, including “data fudging” and “bad statistics.” Homeopathy, which involves treatments that are so heavily diluted that there is barely any drug left in the final solution, “will always be popular where there is distrust in the regular medical health system,” Shaikh says. These remedies also tend to be cheap, she notes, which could explain homeopathy’s popularity in India even as some countries have banned funding for the practice.
Elected officials from Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party have promoted unproven therapies, too. Suman Haripriya, a BJP lawmaker in Assam, suggested that cow urine and dung could be used to cure the coronavirus. Chief Minister of Uttar Pradesh Yogi Adityanath suggested that COVID-19 and other diseases could be overcome with the help of yoga.
Some false news circulating in India has targeted China. Alt News debunked a BJP Maharashtra spokesperson’s tweet, which linked to an article alleging that China was seeking a court’s approval to kill more than 20,000 COVID-19 patients to contain the virus.
Messages from Indian leadership have been mixed. On Saturday, Prime Minister Narendra Modi gave somewhat vague advice to Indians, telling them not to “believe in hearsay and rumours on what to do and what not to do on coronavirus” in a speech.
“While the Prime Minister is saying don’t spread misinformation about coronavirus, [India’s health officials] are propagating misinformation,” Pratik Sinha, co-founder of Alt-News, tells TIME. “On top of that, there are BJP office-bearers who are saying certain cow products can cure coronavirus.” Sinha adds that a huge section of the Indian population may believe this inaccurate information because of the trust they place in the government.
Jha was frustrated upon hearing about these novel approaches to combating the virus. “It made me want to rip my hair out,” he says. “The [government is] undermining their own credibility.” Jha worries that if authorities then ask the public to adhere to more strenuous measures, like abstaining from the temple or shutting down schools, people may not listen.
Although misinformation can be common during an outbreak across different countries, India’s problem involves more than just arbitrary messages. “This is government-sponsored misinformation,” Sinha says. “It’s a lot more dangerous. It’s misinformation coming from people who are very influential.”
Please send any tips, leads, and stories to virus@time.com.

Here’s what you need to know about coronavirus:

6 hours ago - HMCTS coronavirus preparation planning; Coming to court or tribunal during the coronavirus outbreak; Hygiene in courts and tribunal buildings ...
1 day ago - Planned surgery is to be cancelled in Wales as the NHS gears up to tackle the coronavirus outbreak. On Saturday, Public Health Wales said ...
2 days ago - For weeks, the World Health Organization resisted declaring the coronavirus outbreak a pandemic, fearing that doing so would incite panic ...
20 hours ago - President Donald Trump's emergency declaration on the coronavirus aims to jump-start a lagging federal response by expanding testing, ...
2 days ago - Biden's plan takes a two-pronged approach to the coronavirus outbreak. First, he promises “a decisive public health response” focused on free ...
Feb 6, 2020 - As the coronavirus outbreak in China continues to spread, having infected over ... Though researchers expected the drugs to work, this group ...
Feb 25, 2020 - 3:49 pm: US health officials say coronavirus will likely cause a global pandemic. The coronavirus outbreak that's shuttered commerce across ...
... to 10,000 in UK "likely to have coronavirus" - chief scientific adviser Sir Patrick Vallance. Coronavirus is spreading in the UK and a major epidemic is expected.
Mar 3, 2020 - Our response to the current coronavirus outbreak . ... this disease, and thus it also more likely than not that the UK will be significantly affected.
Stay home as much as possible. Before you get sick, make a plan: Gather your supplies: Phone numbers of your doctors and healthcare team, your pharmacy ...
Mar 5, 2020 - Before a COVID-19 outbreak occurs in your community: Plan ... for related coronaviruses such as SARS-CoV and MERS-CoV, it is possible that ...
Feb 12, 2020 - He added that “at some point in time it is highly probable that we'll have ... of our pandemic planning,'” Dr. Nancy Messonnier, director of CDC's ...
 
22 hours ago - The novel coronavirus SARS-CoV-2 can survive in the air for several hours in fine particles known as aerosols, according to preliminary ...
Mar 4, 2020 - Can someone spread the virus without being sick? People are thought to be most contagious when they are most symptomatic (the sickest).
1 day ago - There have been reports suggesting the novel coronavirus could survive in the air for several hours, but the study has not yet been peer reviewed ...
1 day ago - Q: How does COVID-19 spread and what are the symptoms? A: COVID-19 is primarily spread through respiratory droplets, which means to ...
2 days ago - Droplets of bodily fluids - such as saliva or mucus - from an infected person are dispersed in the air or on surfaces by coughing or sneezing.
Feb 27, 2020 - Yes, the virus can spread from one person to another, most likely through droplets of saliva or mucus carried in the air for up to six feet or so ...
3 hours ago - Coronavirus pandemic spreads around the globe ... Trump administration expected to extend European travel ban to include UK and Ireland ... The legislation will provide, according to Pelosi, "paid emergency leave with two ...
The virus causes disease in humans; The virus can spread efficiently from person to person. Previous pandemics include Spanish Influenza in 1918 or H1N1 ...
Mar 6, 2020 - Global travel opens new roads for outbreaks, like coronavirus and the ... evidence that respiratory viruses can be transmitted through the air in ...
Health Professionals Fight Against COVID-19 Myths ...
2 days ago - Misinformation about the COVID-19 travels faster than the virus and ... An array of myths springing up around this disease can be found on the ...
The best way to protect yourself against COVID-19 is by frequently cleaning your hands. By doing this you eliminate viruses that may be on your hands and ...
2 days ago - Misinformation about the COVID-19 travels faster than the virus and ... An array of myths springing up around this disease can be found on the ...
Know the Facts About COVID-19. Friday, March 6, 2020 | 2:48 pm. MYTH. Map of China icon It's referred to as Wuhan or Chinese Coronavirus because it ...
2 days ago - Some chemicals might help disinfect surfaces, but don't try them on yourself. Please. Myth: The new coronavirus is man-made. COVID-19 can be ...
2 days ago - Diseases can make anyone sick regardless of their race or ethnicity. Fear and anxiety about COVID-19 can cause people to avoid or reject others ...
[PDF]
Taking care of each other becomes just as important as taking care of ourselves. Do not make assumptions about others based on perceived symptoms or racial.
5 days ago - You can get COVID-19 from products shipped from China. The United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has not found any ...
3 days ago - Health experts have urged the public to be mindful of where they get information in relation to facts about Covid-19.

Not a time to panic: On India’s response to coronavirus outbreak

India must cut the transmission chain of the virus to save its health system from collapse

With the virus galloping to 116 countries/regions causing more than 118,000 cases and 4,291 deaths, as on Wednesday, March 11, the World Health Organisation took the last logical step the same day to spotlight the threat posed by the novel coronavirus (SARS-CoV-2) — by declaring it a pandemic. The announcement came as no surprise. On Monday, the WHO chief did caution that the “threat of a pandemic has become very real” based on the number of countries reporting new cases. On Thursday, the numbers rose further: 1,27,863 cases and 4,718 deaths. This announcement comes after WHO, on January 30, declared the outbreak a “public health emergency of international concern”. Soon thereafter, it raised the global risk level to its highest — very high. If the spread to more countries and the cases and deaths reported till the third week of February were of concern, it has become alarming since then. On February 22, the WHO chief warned that the “window of opportunity for containing the virus is narrowing”. Unfortunately, many countries did not take the warning seriously; in the last two weeks, the cases reported have increased 13-fold and countries reporting the virus have tripled. Outside China, Italy (12,462), Iran (10,075) and South Korea (7,869) have the most cases. Nearly 90% of cases reported globally are in just four countries and cases reported daily have seen a sharp drop in China and South Korea.
The response to WHO’s new classification should not be one of panic but must instead stir countries into changing the course of the pandemic. While WHO had always asked all countries to take aggressive action in viral containment, it has now become all the more important to take that warning seriously. All countries are required to trace, detect, test, isolate and treat cases to prevent a handful of cases from becoming clusters, and for clusters from becoming widespread in the community and overwhelming the health-care system. Even as India has done well in this by testing, isolating, contact tracing and treating people, it has so far restricted itself to people who have returned from abroad and those who have come in contact with infected people. It may be prudent for India to adopt a more aggressive approach by looking for cases in the community to prevent the silent spread of the virus. In addition, containment measures such as closing down schools and cancelling mass gatherings in enclosed places should be done wherever necessary. Steps such as suspending tourist visas for nearly a month starting March 13 and quarantining Indians if needed are welcome — thermal screening cannot detect infected people who do not show symptoms yet. India should pull out all the stops to cut the transmission chain as its fragile public health-care system will collapse if cases rise exponentially.
Mar 6, 2020 - The outbreak of the corona virus presents Vice President Mike Pence with ... Risk' Coronavirus Response Will Impact His Political Future—and ...
Feb 4, 2020 - The Novel Coronavirus, and other contagions, are on a collision course ... Aging & How Future Contagions May Affect Your Life In Retirement.
Feb 28, 2020 - How does coronavirus affect kids? ... in which this epidemic could uniquely affect children's lives in the next few months, as some governments, ...
2 days ago - The dizzying number of cancellations and suspensions prompted by the coronavirus pandemic just kept growing Thursday, a day that saw the ...
by AR Fehr - ‎2015 - ‎Cited by 164 - ‎Related articles
Jump to Coronavirus Life Cycle - The initial attachment of the virion to the host cell is initiated by ... The next step in the coronavirus lifecycle is the translation of the replicase ... but mutation of this signal does not appear to affect virus ...
Mar 7, 2020 - Scientists are now worried the best-case scenario for coronavirus is ... There's still a lot communities can do to slow the spread, save lives, and buy ... to small numbers of people who had known travel to affected countries. ... it will expose the cracks in our society and our preparedness for future outbreaks.
4 days ago - Taiwan has millions of visitors from China and only 45 coronavirus cases. ... The most important thing about crisis management is to prepare for the next crisis. ... And SARS didn't affect the United States very badly. ... “Our new life of isolation”: 5 people across the world on staying inside to avoid Covid-19 ...
Coronaviruses are named for the spikes that protrude from their surfaces, ... Most people get infected with one or more of these viruses at some point in their lives. ... Now, they hope that work from past outbreaks will help cut the timeline further. ... Airlines and cruise lines have canceled service to destinations affected by the ...
Mar 4, 2020 - Scientists are racing to understand the coronavirus disease, ... For example, ventilators save lives by enabling people with pneumonia to breathe. ... Asian cities affected by coronavirus, the WHO says healthy people do not need to ... 2017 by ...