Showing posts with label Omicron. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Omicron. Show all posts

Saturday, January 1, 2022

Omicron cases dip to 168 after Thursday’s peak of 263

 Omicron cases dip to 168 after Thursday’s peak of 263


TIMES NEWS NETWORK

01.01.2022

After reporting highest single-day spike in Omicron cases for two consecutive days, India on Friday recorded lesser number of infections with Maharashtra, which had been leading the spurt for the last two days, reporting just four cases.

India reported 168 cases on Friday — lower than 263 on Thursday and 215 on Wednesday — taking the country’s total tally to 1,379. While Maharashtra just reported four cases, a sharp fall from 198 the previous day, Delhi led the states in single-day tally with 57 cases. Kerala was second with 44 cases while Haryana and Karnataka recorded 23 cases each, Gujarat 16 and Andhra Pradesh  1.

Maharashtra continues to lead the states in overall tally with 454 cases, followed by Delhi (320 cases), Gujarat (113) and Kerala (107). All other states have cases in double or single digits. With 44 cases, Kerala reported its highest single day tally so far. Health minister Veena George said no community spread of the new variant has been reported. The cases reported in the state include 52 people who came from low-risk countries, 41 from high-risk countries and 14 who came into contact with these people.

Besides Kerala, Gujarat was the other state to cross the 100-mark on Friday.
In Karnataka, of the 23 fresh cases, 19 had international travel history. The rest four had no travel history, but one of them was a contact of an Omicron-infected person.

Friday, December 31, 2021

India records first ‘Omicron death’


India records first ‘Omicron death’

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

31.12.2021

India recorded what could be its first Omicron death on Thursday even as the highly infectious variant spread to two more states, Punjab and Bihar, and recorded highest single-day infections for the second consecutive day. While India has reported close to 1,200 Omicron cases of the new variant, no deaths were reported until now.

Maharashtra confirmed the presence of Omicron in a 52-year-old man who recently died of heart attack in Pimpri Chinchwad, but stopped short of calling him the first casualty of the variant and attributed the death to his underlying health conditions.

The state added198 cases on Thursday — its highest singleday tally for the second consecutive day — which is a major indicator that the Omicron wave is here. The total count of the variant in the state has touched 450. India reported 258 Omicron cases on Thursday, taking the total tally to 1195. After Maharashtra, Delhi reported the second highest cases, 25, while Haryana reported 23 cases. Telangana, Odisha and Bengal reported five cases each while Bihar and Punjab recorded one infection each. Omicron has now spread to 24 states and UTs.

The man from Pimpri Chinchwad had died on December 28 at the local Yashwantrao Chavan Hospital. The state health authorities refrained from labelling it as the first Omicron death despite the man having a travel history to Nigeria and a Co- vid positive diagnosis. They said the patient had diabetes for the past 13 years. “The death of this patient is due to non-Covid reasons. Coincidently, the National Institute of Virology report revealed that he was infected with the Omicron variant,” the authorities said in a statement.
Health experts in Mumbai said that since the man had a Covid positive diagnosis, the death is most likely going to be classified as a Covid fatality.

Across Maharashtra, up to 46% of total 450 confirmed Omicron cases don’t have any international travel history now. Delhi, which recorded 25 new cases, too seems to be heading towards a community spread with health minister Satyendar Jain saying that the new variant has been found in 54% of the Covid samples sent for genome sequencing.

India reports over 10,000 cases a day again


India reports over 10,000 cases a day again

Of 13,154 COVID-19 cases, 961 confirmed to be of Omicron variant; health officials concerned at ‘sudden rise’ in infections

31/12/2021

Losing caution: People at the wholesale Sadar Bazar in Delhi on Thursday, even as COVID-19 cases rise in the country to alarming levels. SUSHIL KUMAR VERMA

SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT NEW DELHI

India reported 13,154 COVID-19 cases on Thursday, with 961 of them confirmed to be of the Omicron variant. At a weekly briefing here, Union Health Ministry officials expressed concern over the “sudden rise” in cases in several cities.

Officials said six States — Maharashtra, West Bengal, Tamil Nadu, Delhi, Karnataka and Gujarat — were of particular concern given the rise in test positivity and the number of weekly cases. Kerala and Maharashtra, however, continue to account for nearly half the cases.

Tuesday, December 28, 2021

Why an Omicron wave may not be as severe as Delta


Why an Omicron wave may not be as severe as Delta

28.12.2021

Though the Omicron coronavirus variant has spread rapidly around the world since it was first detected in South Africa, findings from several new studies suggest it may not be as deadly as the Delta variant, which drove the catastrophic second wave in India. However, vaccination, booster shots and wearing masks remain the key weapons in our arsenal against the new variant. A look at some new developments in research on Omicron

Omicron more contagious but infection likely milder

Three new studies in South Africa, Scotland and England have found that Omicron is causing milder infections than previous variants and is less likely to cause hospitalisation. That’s good news given that the highly contagious nature of the variant is likely to lead to a surge in cases around the world.

Until now, the severity of illness from Omicron was unclear. But these new studies indicate that some biological features specific to the Omicron variant of SARS-CoV-2 make it less dangerous than Delta. Coupled with immunity in the general population because of previous infections and vaccination, experts believe fewer patients will require hospitalisation in the next wave of cases. Though Omicron has been observed to evade antibodies from a previous infection, it may not be able to escape the powerful but slower immune responses that prevent serious disease.

The South African study reported a 70% lower chance of hospitalisation from Omicron compared with other variants, while the Scotland study found a two-thirds reduction in hospitalisation risk compared with Delta. The English study, however, only reported a 15%-20% reduction in hospitalisation and a 40%-45% reduction in the risk of hospitalisation for more than a day.

But the researchers cautioned that results of their studies were still preliminary and Omicron is still likely to cause a large number of hospitalisations, particularly among vulnerable groups and unvaccinated people, given how quickly it is spreading.

The best defence against Omicron is vaccination. Two doses plus a booster shot are likely to provide strong protection against infection and severe illness. But most countries are yet to fully vaccinate a majority of their populations and only a handful, including the US, UK and Australia, are administering booster shots to the general public.

India is far better prepared to face an Omicron wave than it was against the Delta wave earlier this year. In April, during the peak of the Delta surge, just 1.9% of Indians were fully vaccinated and 7.1% partially vaccinated. As of December 23, 41% of Indians are fully vaccinated and another 19% has received at least one dose for a total 60% vaccination coverage.

Loss of taste, smell unlikely but symptoms show up early

Early data shows that Omicron is causing largely the same symptoms as previous variants. Though there are some differences, researchers are still unsure of their impact on the course of the illness.

In South Africa, for instance, those infected with Omicron tended to develop a scratchy or sore throat along with nasal congestion, a dry cough and muscle pain, especially low back pain. But these symptoms have also been reported in infections from Delta and the original coronavirus.

One subtle difference is that Omicron is less likely to cause a loss of taste and smell. Data from Norway found that just 23% of Omicron patients reported a loss of taste and 12% a loss of smell.

A researcher in the US found that vaccinated people with Delta or the original coronavirus generally reported headaches, congestion, sinus pressure and pain, while unvaccinated people were more likely to report shortness of breath, coughing and other flu-like symptoms. It’s likely to be the same with Omicron among vaccinated and unvaccinated patients.

Omicron also appears to have a shorter incubation time. It can take as little as three days before an infected person develops symptoms, becomes contagious and tests positive compared with four to six days for Delta. Omicron likely has specific mutations that allow it to quickly invade cells.

Omicron wave shorter in South Africa

The discovery of Omicron in South Africa last month sent alarm bells ringing around the world, but officials and experts say its wave has already peaked, suggesting Omicron waves may not be long-lasting ones. Earlier in December, the country saw a sharp spike in cases and positivity rate but despite opting against severe lockdowns and other restrictions, the wave has begun to subside Though several countries imposed restrictions on travellers from southern Africa, many still reported Omicron cases within the community, suggesting the variant was already active, if undetected, in other parts of the world.

But South Africa’s subsiding Omicron wave, in addition to a possible lower risk of severe illness and hospitalisation despite a lagging vaccination programme, holds promise for other countries experiencing Omicron outbreaks. The US and parts of Europe, where Omicron is making up a vast majority of new cases, have far greater vaccination coverage.

Data from South Africa suggests its Omicron wave is about two to three weeks ahead of the US, two weeks ahead of Norway and Denmark, and up to four weeks ahead of the UK.

Source: NYT, Economist, media reports

At 135, biggest one-day rise in Omicron cases


At 135, biggest one-day rise in Omicron cases

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

28.12.2021

India’s Omicron tally went well past the 600-mark after registering the highest single-day count of 135 cases on Monday even as the highly infectious variant of coronavirus spread to two new states, Goa and Manipur, thereby affecting a total of 20 states and Union territories.

In Goa, an eight-year-old boy who arrived in the coastal state along with his father from the UK about 11 days ago was found to be infected with Omicron. In Manipur, a 48-year-old man who returned to Imphal West district from Tanzania recently tested positive for the virus.

Delhi recorded 63 fresh cases, the highest to be recorded in a day by any state in the country so far, taking its total tally to 142, second only to Maharashtra which has 167 cases, including 26 detected on Monday. Delhi and Maharashtra alone account for 46% of the total 671 infections. Gujarat is the third worst-affected state with 73 cases followed by Kerala, which has 57 cases.

Dr Suresh Kumar, medical director of Delhi’s LNJP hospital, which is the capital’s largest facility for treatment for Covid-19 patients, said that 85-90% of the patients are asymptomatic while others have very mild symptoms. In Maharashtra, 11 of the 26 fresh cases are from Mumbai. Other states which confirmed new Omicron cases on Monday were Gujarat (24 infections), Telangana (12), Uttarakhand (3), Rajasthan (3) and Haryana (2).

Monday, December 27, 2021

Omicron hits MP, HP, tally tops 500-mark


Omicron hits MP, HP, tally tops 500-mark

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

27.12.2021

India’s Omicron count crossed the 500-mark and stood at 504 on Sunday even as the highly infectious variant of coronavirus spread to two more states — Madhya Pradesh and Himachal Pradesh — taking the number of affected states and UTs to 17.

Madhya Pradesh reported nine cases, all of them foreign travelers. MP home minister Narottam Mishra confirmed on Sunday that Omicron cases were detected in the state, hours after TOI had published a report in its edition in the morning that a private lab at Indore had confirmed eight cases. Later in the day, a 23-year-old man who had returned from Dubai on December 17 also tested positive for Omicron.

“All nine Omicron cases are fully vaccinated, including one from the US who has taken a booster dose. Six have been discharged and the other three are either hospitalised or in home isolation,” Indore chief medical health officer Dr BS Saitya said. Himachal reported its first case — a 45-year-old woman who had arrived from Canada on December 3 – just a day before PM Modi’s scheduled public meeting in Mandi.

Kerala reported maximum daily cases on Sunday with 19 patients testing positive for the variant, taking the state’s total tally to 57, the third highest in the country after Maharashtra (110 cases) and Delhi (79 cases). Rajasthan and Gujarat have 49 cases each. As many as 16 of the fresh cases detected in Kerala on Sunday returned from abroad recently while three of them are patients’ contacts. Haryana reported seven new cases raising the state’s tally to 13.

Science Vs Coronavirus, Again



NEW YEAR MUSINGS PANDEMIC

Science Vs Coronavirus, Again

New vaccine technologies will be developed, and India will be key player in battle against variants

K Srinath Reddy

27.12.2021

Even in the new year, will there be fear? Or will the pandemic descend the slope, as we fervently hope? Will vaccines win the game, even if variants don’t stay the same? Or will we still need to seek safety behind a mask, as taming the wily virus is no easy task?

I have been posed these questions, which are on everyone’s mind. I will start with the disclaimer that uncertain elements of virus behaviour and inconsistent elements of human response dim the images on my crystal ball. However, science provides a light to navigate through the thickets of available facts and posit a plausible path that the pandemic may take during 2022.

Omicron arrived on the world stage in November, replacing the prospect of joyful jingle bells in December with blaring alarm bells. Early studies show that it is milder in virulence but far more infectious than its dreadful cousin Delta which devastated India in the first half of 2021 and is still on a world tour in the western hemisphere.

While individuals may be at a lower risk of severe disease with Omicron, the total number of severely ill persons will still be high if very large numbers get infected by the new variant which is reported to have high capability for escape from prior immunity. Even a small fraction of a large mass of infected persons will yield numbers that will stress our health and social systems.

Recent news from South Africa, that their outbreak of Omicron has been short-lived with case counts coming down, is reassuring. While this decline needs to be sustained, for us to be certain that Omicron is a breezy batsman that does not last long at the crease, the prospects for 2022 do not appear as gloomy as they appeared in mid-December.

As India is just beginning to experience the Omicron effect, we will get to know to what extent the ‘hybrid immunity’ conferred by the Delta wave and the still-advancing vaccination programme offer protection against Omicron-induced illness if not infection.

For India, the first quarter of 2022 will be challenging, with elections and festivities that will draw crowds despite virus warnings. Will people at least wear masks, for protection as they abandon physical distancing? If the initial case counts do not rise steeply, Covid-appropriate behaviour may not find enthusiastic adherents, resulting in a sharp rise in cases later. We will get the reality check by February.

New vaccines will enter our supply chain after completing trials and securing regulatory approvals, as viral variants stimulate innovation. The task of completing double dose vaccination for all eligible adults will be a priority.

January 2022 will see a third dose protection commencing for sections of the population who are at high risk of exposure (frontline health workers) or high risk of severe illness (elderly individuals with co-morbidities). Vaccination will also commence for children in the 15-18 year age group from January 3. India will scale up vaccine development and manufacture for domestic and global use.

Globally, search for new vaccines will continue. Despite being high performers in clinical trials, the mRNA and virus vector vaccines are now demanding additional ‘booster’ doses to provide protection against variants which emerged after the trials. Their current versions are being tweaked to counter recent variants, but will they hold ground against other variants that may emerge later?

Adverse effects of these vaccines, infrequent though they may be, are a matter of concern as boosters are advocated. Inflammation of the heart muscle (myocarditis) and blood clotting disorders (thrombotic thrombocytopenia) are complications of concern. Sub-unit protein vaccines and inactivated virus vaccines may become the preferred options for boosters next year.

Concern that spike protein specific vaccines are becoming less effective against variants with spike mutations will lead to development of multi-antigen vaccines. Besides the inactivated whole virus vaccines, laboratory developed vaccines with an ensemble of several viral antigens are in the trial pathway, with the nucleocapsid protein being a prominent target. India’s growing scientific prowess will play a larger role in vaccine development.

Recently, the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research in the US successfully completed the Phase 1 clinical trial of a pan-corona vaccine which targets all Covid and SARS variants, including Omicron and SARS-1. This soccer ball shaped Spike Ferritin Nanoparticle Covid-19 vaccine has 24 faces, which allows spikes of multiple coronavirus variants to be attached. If it completes the multi-phase clinical trial journey successfully, it may become one of the preferred vaccines.

New antiviral drugs will also be developed and trialled, besides those that have received WHO approval in 2021. Therapeutic approaches to effectively treat symptomatic Covid will improve, for home and hospital care. Telemedicine will see amplified potential and extended use. Investment in health system strengthening will see increased infrastructure and improved surveillance systems, with the challenge of limited health workforce beginning to get addressed. With uncertainty about new variants persisting, mask mandates will continue for several months, even as other restrictions ease.

The virus will continue to mutate. If we widely adopt Covid-appropriate behaviours and vaccinate equitably across the world, we can exert evolutionary pressure on the virus to mutate to an even milder form. The virus will follow the logical path of evolutionary biology if we travel on the road of rational public health policy. We may then not need a Covid-related prediction for 2023.

The writer, a cardiologist and epidemiologist, is President, Public Health Foundation of India (PHFI). Views are personal

This is the first in a multipart series of commentaries on how 2022 may shape up for India and Indians


Civic body wants colleges to enforce social distancing


Civic body wants colleges to enforce social distancing

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Chennai:27.12.2021

To counter the threat from the Omicron variant, the Greater Chennai Corporation has asked colleges and universities in the city to ensure physical distancing in classrooms, labs, libraries and hostels. “Since schools and colleges have resumed classes, it has been observed that in many institutions, there is poor compliance with wearing masks among the students and teaching staff in classrooms and many instances of nonmaintenance of social distancing,” corporation commissioner Gagandeep Singh Bedi said in his letter to deans, registrars and heads of institutions on Friday.

“With Omicron variant spreading rapidly, any Covid inappropriate behaviour will increase the risk of spread of infection,” the letter said.

It also asked colleges to avoid cultural events and functions involving crowding of students and to encourage the use of disposable plates in hostels and canteens.

However, city colleges said it will be difficult to follow social distancing while conducting physical classes.

“It is difficult to maintain social distancing in normal mode with students attending physical classes six days a week. If colleges are allowed to conduct classes in dual mode, we will be able to maintain social distancing,” said Madras Christian College principal Paul Wilson. He said colleges will space out the offline exams if cases increase. DG Vaishnav College principal S Santhosh Baboo said most of the students above 18 years were vaccinated. “If vaccination is allowed for those below 18 years after January 3, we will ask all our first year students to take the jab. Then our campus will be fully vaccinated,” he said.

18 suspected Omicron patients discharged


18 suspected Omicron patients discharged

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Chennai:27.12.2021

As many as 18 out of the 34 Covid-19 patients, who were infected by the new Omicron variant, have been discharged from hospitals. All the remaining active cases, who had a S-gene drop and suspected to be infected with Omicron, are undergoing treatment. This included actor Vadivelu and some members of his film crew, who returned from the UK recently. Chief minister M K Stalin on Sunday inspected infrastructure, amenities and availability of medical oxygen here to tackle the Omicron strain. Around 1.15 lakh beds are ready, and steps are being taken to create another 50,000 beds if warranted, said an official release.

In Tamil Nadu, 610 tested positive for Covid-19 on Sunday -- this was marginally higher than the numbers reported in the last two days. Chennai topped the chart with 171 new cases. With ten more people dying, TN's death toll increased to 36,735. But the state has received applications from 42,600 people for the CM's ex-gratia of Rs50,000 for every covid victim. The government claims that 20,900 have received this amount till date. It has spent Rs104 crore towards this.

As far as vaccination is concerned, more than 17.3 lakh people got inoculated through the state's 16th mega vaccination camp on Sunday. Among them, nearly 70% got their second doses. TN still has more than 90 lakh people who are still due for their second dose. The release said that 58% of the state's vaccine-eligible population have got their first dose and 86% were fully vaccinated. Meanwhile, the government is gearing to begin administration of booster doses for frontline workers and vaccination for children (aged 15 to 18). Health minister Ma Subramanain said TN has over 1.4 crore frontline workers and they will start getting booster shots from January

10. For children (15-18 age), health officials will vaccinate them at their respective schools and special camps.

Nine new Covid-19 cases in Puducherry

Puducherry:

Puducherry logged nine fresh Covid-19 cases on Sunday, taking the tally to 1,29,415, while the toll remained at 1,880 with no fresh fatalities being reported from any of the four enclaves of the Union territory. Puducherry accounted for the maximum number of cases

(8), while Mahe reported one. Karaikal and Yanam reported nil infections, Director of the Department of Health G Sriramulu said in a release. Active cases stood at 127, of whom 34 patients were in hospitals and the remaining 93 in home isolation, he said.

PTI

Third dose will be of same vaccine as two earlier shots


Third dose will be of same vaccine as two earlier shots

9-Month Gap After Second Jab Required

Sushmi.Dey@timesgroup.com

New Delhi:27.12.2021

Nearly three crore health and frontline workers are estimated to be eligible in January for the ‘precaution dose’ of Covid vaccine that will be administered with a gap of nine months from the second dose, official sources said.

As of now, the third jab that will also be given to around three crore people aged above 60 with co-morbidities will be of the same vaccine that one had received in the first and second instances.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi had, on Saturday, announced that Covid vaccination of children aged between 15 and 18 will begin on January 3, whereas administration of “precaution doses” of Covid vaccines to health and frontline workers as well as for those above 60 with co-morbidities will begin from January 10.

However, few of the elderly people may be eligible for the third dose in January after completing the ninemonth gap.

Around six to seven crore children in the age bracket of 15-18 years will be eligible to receive Covaxin from January 3.


Self-discipline key to fighting Covid: PM

In his Mann Ki Baat on Sunday, PM Narendra Modi said self-awareness and self-discipline as well as collective strength of citizens are important in the battle against the virus. Crossing the140-million vaccine mark is an achievement of each and every Indian, he said. P 10

CM Stalin reviews preparedness

Chief minister M K Stalin on Sunday inspected infrastructure, amenities and availability of medical oxygen in Chennai to tackle the Omicron variant. Around 1.15 lakh beds are ready, and steps are being taken to set up 50,000 additional beds if required, said a release. P 6

‘Call on mixing of doses will be based on clinical trial results’

ZyCoV-D Vax Is Still Not Part Of Govt’s Programme

An official said, “Any decision on mixing of doses will be taken based on clinical trial results. CMC Vellore is conducting trials to assess the efficacy level if vaccines developed on different platforms are mixed for the booster dose. If they come up with any interim findings, that will be considered but as of now the same vaccine will be administered as the third dose.” Besides, around six to seven crore children in the age bracket of 15-18 years will be eligible to receive Covaxin from January 3.

The nationwide Covid immunisation programme was first rolled out on January 16 this year with preference to health and frontline workers in the first phase. Vaccination of those above 60 started from March 1. While initially the gap between two doses of both Covishield and Covaxin was 28 days, it was later increased to 6-8 weeks in March and 12-16 weeks in May for Covishield.

Since Covishield accounts for majority of the nearly 89% of the total over 141 crore doses administered in the country so far, it is estimated that a maximum of one crore people above 60 with co-morbidities would complete the nine-month gap in January. “Our estimates suggest almost all of the health and frontline workers would be eligible for the third dose. However, it may still take a few more weeks from January 10 for those above 60 with co-morbidities to become eligible after completing the nine-month gap between the second and third doses,” the official said.

While Zydus Cadila’s DNAbased vaccine ZyCoV-D has also been approved for use in children above 12 years, the vaccine is still not part of the government’s programme.

Full report on www.toi.in

TAKING NO CHANCES: A healthcare worker collects a nasal swab sample for Covid-19 testing in Prayagraj on Sunday

Jabbing of 15-18-year-olds based on scientific assessment: NTAGI chief

-Sushmi Dey
New Delhi:

The government’s decision to start Covid immunisation of children in 15-18 age bracket is based on scientific assessment of local as well as global data that shows 75% of Covid deaths in children during the last two years have been in this age group, National Technical Advisory Group on Immunisation (NTAGI) chairman N K Arora said.

“Assessment of data from last two years shows 75% of deaths in all children — less than 18 years — due to Covid-19 are among 15-18 years. This is also the age when children also interact more with other adults. So, youngsters behave more like adults and worldwide, the vaccination is given step wise in this manner. We have also done vaccination on the same scientific principles. Our own data shows that complications among children below 18 years are concentrated in the age bracket of 15-18 years. This is the reason for prioritising this age bracket for vaccination in children,” Arora said.

Saturday, December 25, 2021

Another Omicron case in city, govt calls meet of pvt hosps


Another Omicron case in city, govt calls meet of pvt hosps

Sumati.Yengkhom@timesgroup.com

Kolkata:25.12.2021

One more Kolkata resident, a 27-year-old who returned from UK last week, tested positive for Omicron on Friday. This is the third confirmed case of Omicron among patients under institutional quarantine in Kolkata. Earlier, a sevenyear-old boy from Farakka and a 49-year-old from Kolkata had tested positive for this variant at Telangana and New Delhi.

Even though the Omicron count in Bengal is not yet alarming, health experts fear the number could multiply soon given its high transmissibility. The state health department on Friday asked all private hospitals to keep their infrastructure ready and called a meeting with them on Monday.

The latest Omicron patient, a resident of south Kolkata, has been working in Dublin, Ireland, for the past five years. He reached the city last Friday, flying from Manchester via Abu Dhabi and New Delhi. He tested negative on arrival but developed symptoms later and was admitted to Woodlands Hospital after testing Covid positive.

“The patient has been allotted a single room in the Covid-19 unit as per the isolation protocol. He is stable,” said Rupali Basu, MD & CEO of Woodlands.

Currently, two other Covid patients in hospital isolation — one in Kolkata and another in Kharagur — are awaiting genome-sequencing reports. Another 26-year-old woman, who arrived in Kolkata from UK on December 10, tested negative for Omicron on Friday. She was Covid negative on arrival but was admitted to Beliaghata ID Hospital after developing symptoms.


‘Pvt hosps must ramp up infra for Omicron cases’

The five Omicron cases in the state and the suspected ones have international travel history. Anticipating more such international flyers needing hospital isolation, the health authorities have asked private hospitals not to refuse international flyers, who test positive on arrival, and prefer private hospital treatment.

“Some Covid-positive international travellers prefer private hospitals. Private facilities need to step up isolation infrastructure for suspected and confirmed Omicron cases,” said a health official. The health department has shared a document, ‘Infrastructure information regarding private hospital for isolation of Covid Omicron suspect admission from the airport’ with private hospitals. The hospitals have to update details, including number of Covid beds, Covid ICU beds, isolated beds for international flyers and the number of ventilators.

“We will have an online meeting with private hospitals on Monday where Covid infrastructure update, with stress on facilities for Covid-positive international travellers and those detected with Omicron,” said a Swasthya Bhawan official.

Half of tested Omicron cases had 2 doses: ICMR


Half of tested Omicron cases had 2 doses: ICMR

Several States announce night curfew

25/12/2021

SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT NEW DELHI

With India identifying nearly 358 cases of the Omicron variant of COVID-19, an analysis of 183 of them by the Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR) found that nearly half of them were fully vaccinated. A little over a quarter had no international travel history but had likely come into contact with those infected. None of those evaluated had severe symptoms, with close to 73% being asymptomatic. Of them, 60% were men.

This was disclosed by the Health Ministry on Friday.

Of the 17 States where the variant has been confirmed, Uttar Pradesh, Maharashtra, Haryana, Madhya Pradesh and Gujarat have announced night curfews.

Half of tested Omicron cases had 2 doses: ICMR


Half of tested Omicron cases had 2 doses: ICMR

Several States announce night curfew

25/12/2021

SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT NEW DELHI

With India identifying nearly 358 cases of the Omicron variant of COVID-19, an analysis of 183 of them by the Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR) found that nearly half of them were fully vaccinated. A little over a quarter had no international travel history but had likely come into contact with those infected. None of those evaluated had severe symptoms, with close to 73% being asymptomatic. Of them, 60% were men.

This was disclosed by the Health Ministry on Friday.

Of the 17 States where the variant has been confirmed, Uttar Pradesh, Maharashtra, Haryana, Madhya Pradesh and Gujarat have announced night curfews.

Friday, December 24, 2021

Genome test detects 33 more Omicron cases in TN


Genome test detects 33 more Omicron cases in TN

Pushpa.Narayan@timesgroup.com

Chennai:24.12.2021

Whole genome sequencing has confirmed the presence of Omicron variant in at least 33 more Covid-19 patients in Tamil Nadu, health minister Ma Subramanian said on Thursday. With this, 34 patients — passengers with an international travel history and their close contacts — were found to be positive for the variant.

“We have received confirmation that 33 more people were carrying the new variant. Earlier, a person who travelled from

Nigeria via Doha tested positive for Omicron,” Subramanian said. As per ICMR protocol, all international passengers from ‘at-risk’ countries should undergo screening at airports. Those who test negative are allowed domiciliary quarantine and are instructed to do a repeat test on the eighth day. Those who test positive will be sent to hospitals for isolation and their samples will be sent for whole genome sequencing tests to labs in Chennai, Bengaluru and Pune. At least 2% of passengers from other countries are tested.

First Omicron patient gets discharged

On Friday, health department will brief the CM and senior officials on advisories issued by the Union health ministry so the state can plan for prevention and management of the viral infection, Subramanian said.

Meanwhile, the first Omicron patient, a person who travelled to Chennai from Nigeria via Doha, was discharged from the Government Covid Hospital in Guindy along with two of his relatives on Thursday. With this, Omicon cases in the state dropped to 31. “They had mild infection and have now tested negative,” Subramanian said.

Until 8am on Thursday, the state had tested 15,259 passengers, who had travelled from ‘at risk’ countries, and 2,870 of the 1,00,950 passengers who travelled from other countries. Of the 18,129 tests, 114 passengers — 45 on arrival, 48 on the eighth day and 21 family and close contacts — have tested positive .

The state sent all 114 samples to whole genome sequencing labs. Among the 114 Covid-19 patients, S-gene drop was noticed in 57. On Thursday, the state received results for 60 samples. Most (33) of them were Omicron positive and 20 were Delta positive, he said. Almost all 114 patients suffered a mild form of the viral infection and 26 patients have been discharged until Thursday evening, he added. During a meeting on Thursday, the state health department again insisted on the need for testing on arrival and mandatory home quarantine for international passengers. “Of the 57 patients who had Sgene drop, nearly 37 were passengers or contacts of passengers who travelled from countries that were not at risk. While 19 contacts of patients from other countries were tested positive, there were just two among people who came from countries at risk,” said health secretary J Radhakrishnan.

The state, he said, pushed for booster doses, vaccination for children and urged the Centre to extend the service of health care workers appointed on contract under the central scheme until March 31, 2022.

‘Omicron may trigger 3rd wave, peak in Feb’


IIT KANPUR STUDY

‘Omicron may trigger 3rd wave, peak in Feb’

Syed.Akbar@timesgroup.com

Hyderabad:24.12.2021

Researchers at IIT Kanpur have predicted that a third wave, which may be triggered by the Omicron variant of the Covid-19 virus, may peak in India by February 3.

“Assuming that a third wave of Covid-19 hits the country, and following the trends happening around the world, this project report forecasts India’s third wave of Covid-19 to start around mid-December and peak in the beginning of February,” the report, published in online preprint server MedRxiv, said. The research report used the data of the first and second waves in India, and the current rise in cases triggered by Omicron in various countries, to predict a possible third wave in the country.

The researchers said the study “suggests the cases reach peak value after 735 days from our initial observation date, which is January 30, 2020, when India reported its first official case of Covid-19. So, the cases start rising around December 15, 2021, and the peak of the third wave will occur on Thursday, February 3, 2022”.

Salem district registers 1st Omicron case


Salem district registers 1st Omicron case

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Salem:24.12.2021

The Salem district registered its first Omicron case with a 28-year-old woman from Mullai Nagar in the city testing positive for the infection on Thursday. She has been admitted to the Omicron special ward in the Salem Government Mohan Kumaramangalam Medical College and Hospital (SGMKMCH) for treatment. The doctors said that her condition was stable.

The woman works as a software engineer in the US. The health department personnel at the Chennai international airport collected swab samples from her when she returned on December 13. They kept her in Chennai for four days in isolation though her test results turned negative for the novel coronavirus.

“However, the health department once again collected swab samples from her on December 17 and allowed her to proceed to Salem,” said collector S Karmegam.

She came to Salem in an ambulance and isolated herself in her house till Thursday morning (December 23), when the health department confirmed that she had tested positive for Omicron. She was immediately admitted to the Omicron special ward at SGMKMCH.

Meanwhile, a person who came from New Zealand to the city was admitted to a private hospital on Thursday.

Thursday, December 23, 2021



Getting vaxxed better than being on ventilator: Shivraj

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Bhopal:23.12.2021

While the state braces for the Omicron threat, Madhya Pradesh CM Shivraj Singh Chouhan on Wednesday said that getting the vaccine is better than going on a ventilator.

“Wearing masks, following social distancing and getting vaccinated are no longer matters of our choice. Now, it is everyone’s social responsibility. We have to make sure that we do not endanger the lives of other people by our careless behavior,” the CM said, pointing out that the Covid death toll in USA has exceeded 8 lakh, and the UK and many other European countries are affected by the third wave.

“We all lost our loved ones in the first and second waves of Corona. Caution is necessary to prevent the third wave. Wear a mask, follow social distancing and, most importantly, get the Covid vaccine mandatorily,” the CM said at a vaccination centre in Bhopal’s Barkhedi.

Over 10.5 lakh vaccine doses were administered in the state during a mega drive on Wednesday.

Chouhan said that over 9.9 crore vaccine doses have been administered in MP. “If people come forward and get vaccinated, then we will succeed in providing protection to everyone. It is scientifically proven that vaccination is effective in saving lives. Therefore, it is not wise to risk your life by remaining unvaccinated. Let us all motivate everyone around us to get vaccinated,” the CM said, urging all religious leaders, social workers and political parties to join in motivating people to get the jabs.

Chouhan said the government is shoring up healthcare facilities to face a possible third wave of Covid. Oxygen supply, beds, medicines, equipment and trained staff are being arranged in hospitals.

Omicron in 15 states, tally 257; PM chairs meet today



Omicron in 15 states, tally 257; PM chairs meet today

24 Of 39 Fresh Infections From Southern States

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

New Delhi:  23.12.2021

Omicron spread to the 15th state/UT in India on Wednesday with Haryana reporting six cases of the highly infectious variant of coronavirus even as 39 fresh infections took the country’s total tally to 257. With cases rising, Prime Minister Narendra Modi has called for a high-level meeting on Thursday to review Covid-19 situation.

Other states which recorded fresh infections were Telangana (14 cases), Kerala (9), Rajasthan (4), Delhi (3), Bengal  (2) and Andhra Pradesh (1).

Haryana health and family welfare minister Anil Vij told the assembly that three residents each from Gurgaon and Faridabad district have tested positive for Omicron. All three Gurgaon residents have a history of travelling to India via Dubai from the UK.

Most of the 14 patients who tested positive for Omicron in Telangana are medical tourists. While two of them arrived from the UK, an ‘at-risk’ nation, 12 came from Kenya and Somalia, both ‘non-risk’ countries.

In Kerala, all 9 fresh cases — six in Ernakulam and three in Thiruvananthapuram — had landed from abroad recently. While three of them came from the UK, two each came from Tanzania and Nigeria and one each from Ghana and Ireland.

K’taka: Will trace contacts of +ve patients in 24 hrs

Bengaluru:

With Omicron cases spreading rapidly across the globe, the Karnataka government on Wednesday said it would make aggressive efforts to trace, track and quarantine the primary and secondary contacts of Covid-positive persons within 24 hours.

TK Anil Kumar, principal secretary, health department, has directed all the district authorities to ensure dedicated staff for contact tracing and for quarantine, home isolation watch immediately. The primary contacts should be tested on day 1 and day 8 and home-quarantined during this period. If they test positive, they are to be treated and managed as per the state Covid protocol. P 2

No travel history for cases in Raj

However, three of the four new Omicron cases that were reported from Rajasthan neither had any recent travel history nor did they come in contact with foreign travelers, causing concern among the health authorities. The three are residents of Jaipur and the health department has launched a massive exercise to test those who came in contact with them.

The fourth person who tested positive on Wednesday is a 27-year-old Kenyan woman who had travelled to Jaipur recently and her samples were sent for genome sequencing after she developed Covid symptoms. The Kenyan is currently admitted to LNJP hospital in Delhi. “We have informed the hospital in Delhi about her testing positive for Omicron,” said Jaipur’s chief medical health officer Dr Narottam Sharma.

OMICRON VS WE THE PEOPLE


STEPPING INTO 2022 HEALTH YEAR-ENDER

OMICRON VS WE THE PEOPLE

As Omicron Threatens To Emerge As The Predominant Covid-19 Variant Over Delta That Caused The Second Wave In 2021, People’s Attitude Will Matter Most In 2022. Vaccines Form The First Line Of Defence, But Experts Say The Universal Mantra Is: Mask Up, Keep Distance

Pushpa.Narayan@timesgroup.com
Times of india 

23.12.2021

As the year draws to an end, there’s a sense of déjà vu. In December 2020 too, Covid-19 cases had dipped and experts were talking of herd immunity. But by May the second wave was on us. This December too, cases are down, and the spectre of Omicron looms.

“Omicron has the potential to rewrite the pandemic schedule,” warns senior virologist Dr T Jacob John. “The transmission rate of the new variant is several times higher. It has a greater ability to evade the immune system, but the disease is mild. Initially many thought it was a good sign, but the massive increase in number is now leading to an increase in hospitalisations and deaths,” he says.

Covid-19 has been around for nearly two years now, but we still haven’t learned to live with it. The moment cases drop people ignore vaccines, masks and social distancing norms – till the numbers rise again.

On May 21, at the peak of the pandemic, the state reported more than 36,000 new cases, and by the end of the month there were more than 3 lakh people in the active registry overwhelming hospitals and wearing out health workers. Beds, drugs, oxygen and ambulances were never enough.

By September, however, the numbers were down, and everyone was back on the roads. In itself, that isn’t a problem. For example, Singapore and Australia, which aimed for ‘zero-Covid’ strategies, have given up such plans. Our problem is that we don’t wear masks and keep social distance when the lockdown is lifted.

A survey by the National Institute of Epidemiology in November found that only 14% of people in slum areas and 21% in non-slum areas wore masks in shops, pharmacies and places of worship. The result is newer clusters at workplaces, educational institutions and family reunions. “Most patients are infected with the delta variant. The second wave is not yet over,” says health secretary J Radhakrishnan.

National Institute of Epidemiology deputy director Dr Prabhdeep Kaur says we can push back or slow down the wave if we put evidence into practice. “The key tools that remain with us are vaccines and masks, besides social distancing, and other practices such as hand hygiene and social distancing,” says Dr Kaur. Tamil Nadu now reports an average of 600 cases and 10 deaths a day.

The flow charts of patients suspected to carry the Omicron variant look worse. “We have confirmation that one of the international patients carried the new variant. He was at home for less than half a day and by then almost all his family members and close contacts were infected,” says the health secretary.

The state has ramped up infrastructure and resources. Health minister Ma Subramanian says more than 1 lakh isolation beds have been set aside for Covid-19 patients. Tamil Nadu has enhanced oxygen storage capacity in state-run facilities from around 200 tonnes last year to more than 1,400 tonnes.

To increase vaccination coverage, the state organises daily camps, door-to-door vaccinations and two mega camps a week. Still, data from the immunisation wing show nearly 15% of the adult population in the state have ignored the vaccine, and around 44% of them haven’t completed the course.

“The pandemic is no longer about the virus and management, it’s about attitudes. We must work together to end this pandemic. Get the vaccine and mask up,” says Subramanian.

Wednesday, December 22, 2021

No proof to suggest that existing vaccines don’t work on Omicron: Govt


No proof to suggest that existing vaccines don’t work on Omicron: Govt

New Delhi:  22.12.2021

There is no evidence to suggest that existing vaccines do not work on Omicron variant of coronavirus, though some of the mutations reported on spike gene may decrease the efficacy of existing vaccines, the Rajya Sabha was informed on Tuesday.

"There are limited available data, and no peer-reviewed evidence, on vaccine efficacy or effectiveness to date for Omicron," Union Health Minister Mansukh Mandaviya said in a written reply. He was responding to a question on whether the vaccinations that are given in the country are effective to develop immunity for this variant.

"However, vaccine protection is also by antibodies as well as by cellular immunity, which is expected to be relatively better preserved. Hence vaccines are expected to still offer protection against severe disease and, vaccination with the available vaccines remains crucial," he added.

Listing the steps taken by the government after the news of the spread of Omicron variant of COVID-19 in various countries, Mandaviya said his ministry on the basis of risk assessment reviewed the existing travel guidelines and revised rules for international arrivals were issued on November 28 which were further amended two days later.

According to the guidelines, regions or countries have been re-classified as 'atrisk' based on epidemiological situation of COVID-19 there and reporting of Omicron variant from these countries. PTI

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