Friday, June 12, 2020

TN government alters English names of 1,018 places to match their Tamil pronounciation

TN government alters English names of 1,018 places to match their Tamil pronounciation

Hereafter the district Collectors will take steps for changing the names of these places through the local bodies concerned.

Published: 11th June 2020 12:11 AM | Last Updated: 11th June 2020 08:10 AM 

Tamil Nadu CM Edappadi K Palaniswami (Photo | PTI)

By Express News Service

CHENNAI: The state government has issued a notification as per the recommendation of an experts committee for changing the names of 1,018 places, including of many important places, in accordance with how they are exactly pronounced in Tamil.


Hereafter the district Collectors will take steps for changing the names of these places through the local bodies concerned.


The announcement in this regard was made in December 2018. Though the G.O for the changed names was issued on April 1, the government has released it only on Wednesday.

Here's a list of some of these places:


Tondiyarpet - Thandaiyaarpettai



Purasawalkam - Purasaivaakkam



Vepery - Vepperi



Perambur - Peramboor



VOC Nagar - Va.OO.Si. Nagar



Kodungaiyur - Kodungaiyoor



Peravallur - Peravalloor



Siruvallur - Siruvalloor



Konnur - Konnoor



Koyembedu - Koyambedu



Egmore - Ezhumboor



Chintadripet - Chintadaripettai



Triplicane - Thiruvallikkeni



Mylapore - Mayilaappoor



Thiruvanmiyur - Thiruvanmiyoor



Mambalam - Maambalam



Saidapet - Saithaappettai



Ekkattuthangal - Eekkattuththaangal




Guindy Park - Gindi Poongaa



Thiyagaraya Nagar - Thiyaagaraaya Nagar



Pallikaranai - Pallikkaranai



Okkiam Thorappakkam - Okkiyam Thuraipakkam



Sholinganallur - Solinganalloor



Uthandi - Uththandi



Mugalivakkam - Mugalivaakkam



Manappakkam - Manappaakkam



Alandur - Aalandhoor



Meenambakkam - Meenambaakkam



Porur - Poroor



Nanganallur - Nangainallur



Adambakkam - Aadhambaakkam



Ambattur - Ambaththoor



Thiruvottriyur - Thiruvotriyoor



Dharmapuri - Tharumapuri



Madavaram - Maathavaram



Dharapuram - Tharaapuram



Coimbatore - Koyampuththoor



Gudalur - Koodaloor



Puducherry - Puthucherry (A place in TN)



Varagur - Varagoor



Talaivasal - Thalaivasal



Kandalur - Kaanthaloor



Tuvagudi - Thuvakkudi



Manaparai - Manapparai



Chattrappatti - Chatthirappatti



Pudur - Puthoor



Uthamapalayam - Uthamapaalayam



Vellore - Veeloor



Pernambut - Peranaampattu



Vatalagundu - Vaththalakundu



Thiruvarur - Thiruvaroor



Muthupet - Muthuppettai



Tiruthuraipundi - Thirutthurai Poondi



Kudavasal - Kudavaasal


Nidamangalam - Needaamangalam



Orathanadu - Oratthanaadu

Soon, plasma therapy trial on critical patients

Soon, plasma therapy trial on critical patients

Sumitra.DebRoy@timesgroup.com

Mumbai:11.06.2020

A pan-Maharashtra clinical trial to assess the efficacy of plasma therapy to treat severely-ill Covid-19 patients is set to be launched by the medical education department. Around 21 public medical colleges from the state will be participating in the trial, presumably one of the largest in the world to study critical patients. KEM, Sion, Nair and Cooper hospitals are four premier medical colleges from the city that are likely to be part of the trial.

The Drug Controller General of India (DCGI) granted approval on Monday to the Government Medical College, Nagpur, which will be heading the trial. State officials said the ongoing pan-India trial by ICMR is to study the efficacy of the convalescent plasma therapy on moderately-ill patients, while the state will look at only critical cases. “Our experience shows the severe cases need plasma therapy and therefore we chose to study its effect on them,” said Dr Sanjay Mukherjee, secretary, medical education department.

The randomised open trial is likely to include 500 patients, who would be given plasma from recovered patients. “We have started the process to procure 10 apheresis machines which will separate plasma from the blood,”

Govt hires 1.2K more doctors, health workers

Govt hires 1.2K more doctors, health workers

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Chennai:11.06.2020

As Covid-19 cases continued to surge in Tamil Nadu, the government on Wednesday announced recruitment of 1,239 doctors and 2,834 healthcare workers on a contract basis for a three-month period.

This is in addition to the 530 doctors, 4,893 nurses, 2,715 health inspectors and 1,508 lab technicians the health and family welfare department hired earlier.

An official release said chief minister Edappadi K Palaniswami has ordered the appointment of 574 post-graduates at a monthly salary of ₹75,000 and 665 more doctors (graduates) at ₹60,000 a month. The lab technicians and 1,230 multipurpose healthcare personnel will be paid between ₹12,000 and ₹15,000. Orders were being issued and they are in the process of joining duty, health minister C Vijayabaskar told mediapersons on Wednesday and added that this would lessen the burden of doctors and other healthcare workers. Beds in government hospitals in Chennai will also be increased from about 5,000 beds to 10,000.

Govt docs, nurses worried about working conditions

Govt docs, nurses worried about working conditions

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Chennai:11.06.2020

As cases in government hospitals increased, more doctors have tested positive for the viral infection and government doctors and nurses expressed concerns about working conditions.

“As of now 60 of our doctors in Rajiv Gandhi Government General and related institutes have tested positive and are under treatment at ESI Hospital in Aynavaram. Five doctors have been asked to share a room. We have asked the government to provide them with separate rooms,” said TN Government Doctors Association president Dr K Senthil.

While staff nurses at Omandurar Medical College Hospital went on a short-lived flash strike on Wednesday, seeking nurse appointments to share the increasing workload, doctors’ bodies also asked for more staff at Women and Children’s Hospital in Egmore.

“We are now heavily short staffed as doctors and nurses are on quarantine.” said a doctor adding, “We worked for the government but did not get separate rooms to sleep when we have been infected. At the women's hospital many gynecs are at risk because they work closely with women in labour. They scream when they have pain and chances of droplet infections are very high,” a senior doctor undergoing treatment said. At Omandurar hospital, the nurses strike was called off after dean Dr Narayana Babu promised them to resolve the issue. According to sources, there are about 140 nurses attached to the hospital and half of them are in quarantine.

“For the 400 patients in the Covid ward, just 20-23 nurses are not enough and while on night duty, timings some time increase up to 12 hours. When we get affected, our families too are at risk,” said a nurse.

College holds convocation online to honour students

College holds convocation online to honour students

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Chennai:11.06.2020

There were no laughter, no claps, only silence as 453 engineering students received their certificates during a ‘virtual graduation day’ on Wednesday.

The function continued for more than an hour and students sat in front of their computers at homes peering into the screen as their images popped up on screen when their names were read out.

Rajalakshmi Institute of Technology, the college which held virtual graduation day sent an email of scanned copy of graduation certificates to all students. Students and parents were asked to log on at the specific time on a web platform to watch the live event.

“It is entirely a new experience for me. We looked forward to our graduation day where we put on a convocation robe and cap flanked by friends and family. I missed my friends on graduation day,” said Aswathi Muralidharan, one of the two rank holders who received their degrees in person.

But, she said her college organised the virtual graduation day well. “They have collected photographs of all students and used Instagram filters to put graduation day caps to the pictures. It is the new form of graduation,” she added. Another student Muthuvel C said it was a new experience for all students.

“Because of Covid-19, we were not able to conduct an inperson graduation day. So, we thought of holding virtual graduation day. We sent a scanned copy of certificates to all students,” said Thangam Meganathan, chairperson of Rajalakshmi Institutions.

Of 453 students, only seven could not login. More than 600 students and parents watched the event. Telangana governor Tamilisai Soundararajan was the chief guest.

ALL VIRTUAL: Telangana governor Tamilisai Soundararajan (bottom left) and others at the online graduation day of Rajalakshmi Institute of Technology on

City cut off, no mad rush for train tickets

MANY SEATS AVAILABLE

City cut off, no mad rush for train tickets

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Chennai:11.06.2020

There was no mad rush to book tickets when reservations opened on Wednesday for the additional trains on Chengalpet-Trichy-Chengalpet and Arakonam-Coimbatore-Arakonam routes scheduled to run from Friday.

Railway officials say the sluggish demand for seats is because the trains do not touch Chennai, because it is a red zone and the state government has requested railways to operate services within the state without touching the state capital.

Tickets are sold out in minutes for trains during summer but around 1,000 second sitting seats are available on Chengalpet-Trichy train and 146 sleeper class seats on Chengalpet-Trichy train via Mayiladuthurai for travel on Friday. However, there was demand for second seating on the train via Mayiladuthurai as booking status touched waitlist 2 by Wednesday evening. Officials say this could be because several people from southern suburbs of Chennai may be travelling to Kumbakonam or Mayiladuthurai. There are several seats vacant for trains scheduled to depart on Saturday and Sunday. There are hardly any takers for the Arakonam-Coimbatore intercity train as 1,545 second sitting seats and 90 AC chair car seats are available for travel on Friday. The train has around 1,700 second sitting seats.

A railway official said, “Reservations is likely to pick up in the coming days. The services were started after a request from the state government because there was a feedback that there will be demand on these routes. The government wants to start trains within the state in a phased manner. A request was sent to the railway board and the routes were approved.” Several people who live in southern suburbs of Tambaram and Chengalpet often travel to Kumbakonam, Mayiladuthurai and Trichy.

Though the idea behind starting the service from Chengalpet is to discourage residents of Chennai from travelling, people can still board the trains as cabs are available. “These trains will be useful for people as more lockdown relaxations are expected,” he added.

Southern Railway, following the state government’s request, is already operating some special trains connecting cities like Coimbatore, Madurai and Trichy. The Chennai to Delhi Rajdhani specials from Chennai is the only popular train.

Madurai university invents respirator-cum-ventilator

Madurai university invents respirator-cum-ventilator

11.06.2020

A research team from the Madurai Kamaraj University (MKU) has invented a ventilator-cum-respirator device (LIDS-VR) that would help prevent the spread of coronavirus while providing continuous oxygen supply for frontline workers, infected patients and healthy people. Vice chancellor of MKU, professor M Krishnan, said a team of experts - Dr T Arockia Doss, department of physics and Dr B Ashokkumar, department of genetic engineering, invented this device (LIDS-VR). They was demonstrated the device in front of Dr N Sivasubramanian, former senior scientist, Isro, who has appraised the invention.

RT-PCR tests to detect Covid not fully dependable

RT-PCR tests to detect Covid not fully dependable

Syed.Akbar@timesgroup.com

Hyderabad:11.06.2020

In a finding that could have widespread ramifications, researchers at Centre for Cellular and Molecular Biology (CCMB), Hyderabad, have found that about 50% of Covid-19 positive samples tested through the standard RT-qPCR test may not yield the correct result.

Real-time quantitative reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-qPCR) test has been recommended by the WHO and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and is used globally to detect the virus.

The CCMB scientists found a high percentage of false negative cases while comparing the RT-qPCR with a new test method developed by the them. The new test - R-T-nPCR - is not only cost-effective but can be conducted on a large number of people in a short time, the researchers said. is “We found that taking both standard RT-qPCR tests together, the RT-nPCR test was able to correctly identify 90% of samples detected as positive by RTqPCR. It also detected 13% samples as positive among samples that were negative by the standard RT-qPCR test (likely false negatives),” the scientists said in their research paper which has been uploaded on an online pre-print repository for biological sciences ‘bioRxiv’.

“Based on the experimentally measured false negative rate by RT-nPCR tests from this study, we estimated that as many as 50% of the positive samples may escape detection in single pass testing by RTqPCR in an actual testing scenario,” they added.

The new method uses RTnested PCR and is equally sensitive as RT-qPCR. This method needs a simple PCR machine. It increases the possibility of many more labs doing Covid-19 tests, thereby expanding testing capacity. RT-qPCR requires an expensive qPCR machine, which is not found in many labs in the country.

“The CCMB method is suitable for largescale surveillance,” the researchers claimed.

Poorer show by Indian institutions in QS World University Rankings

Poorer show by Indian institutions in QS World University Rankings

Manash Pratim Gohain & Hemali Chhapia TNN

11.06.2020

NewDelhi: Indian universities made a poorer show at the QS World University Rankings, 2021 with majority of the topranked institutions dropping in their rankings and just four universities in Top 300 as against six last year.

Though IIT-Bombay retained its position as the topranked Indian institution, it too dropped from 152 to 172nd position this year. All the government-run institutions accorded with the Institution of Eminence (IoE) tag, slipped down.

Among the top five Indian universities — IIT-Bombay, IISc-Bangalore, IIT-Delhi, IITMadras and IIT-Kharagpur — the IITs at Kharagpur and Kanpur have fallen out of the Top 300 list. Delhi University, an IoE, falls out of the Top 500 list. This year, 21Indian universities are in Top 1000 as against 24 last year. There is no Indian private university in the Top 650 list.

IIT-Delhi director, Prof V Ramgopal Rao, said, “The character of our institutions is different. Also, it is a marathon we are running, not a 100 metre race.” He said perception-based scores by these agencies are open to a lot of fallacies and other considerations. “We have all had issues with this.” “This is a very dicey and non-transparent metric. International reputation needs an altogether different strategy. We need a global campaign for education like we did ‘Incredible India’ for tourism. In the case of Delhi, at least 200 new recruitments have been made in last few years. Our citations per faculty score have gone down a bit this year because it takes time for new faculty to become productive in our system,” said Rao.

Earlier this year, leading IITs — Bombay, Delhi, Guwahati, Kanpur, Kharagpur, Madras and Roorkee — decided not to participate in any of the Times Higher Education (THE) — World University Rankings, citing lack of transparency in the methodology of ranking process.

Full report on www.toi.in

RGUKT postpones exams

RGUKT postpones exams

12/06/2020

The Rajiv Gandhi University of Knowledge Technologies (RGUKT), also known as IIIT, Basar, in Nirmal district, has postponed exams for the P2 and E4 second semester examinations in view of the COVID-19 situation. The exams would however be conducted when the situation improves. According to IIIT Basar sources, the institution has adopted the scheme of carry forward for the students of P1, E1, E2 and E3 batches. The students from these batches are to get promoted to the next semester or year but will need to clear the exams whenever the institution holds exams.

NIRF ranking: Two Bengaluru institutions retain top positions

NIRF ranking: Two Bengaluru institutions retain top positions

While IISc. and NLSIU repeat their performance, IIMB slips to second spot

12/06/2020

Indian Institute of Science, Bengaluru, bagged the top spot in universities ranking in the National Institutional Ranking Framework announced on Thursday; (right) University of Mysore ranked 27th among varsities in the country. Sudhakara Jain & M.A. Sriram

Two Bengaluru-based educational institutions have bagged the topmost rankings in the National Institutional Ranking Framework (NIRF) announced on Thursday.

While the Indian Institute of Science (IISc.) bagged the top spot in the universities ranking and the second spot in the overall ranking, the National Law School of India University (NLSIU) claimed the top spot in the law category. Both institutes retained their earlier rankings.

However, the Indian Institute of Management Bangalore (IIMB) ranking under the management category slipped by one position to be ranked second. An IIMB official said that they were happy to be in the top-three category and will analyse the scores in all parameters in detail.

Meanwhile, NLSIU in a statement said that their perception, teaching and learning outcomes, as well as graduation outcomes have been key contributors for its success in the rankings. “We aim to sustain our performance in these parameters, but will redouble our efforts and focus on research and practice as well as our outreach and inclusivity,” said Sudhir Krishnaswamy, Vice-Chancellor of NLSIU, in a press release.

Anurag Kumar, IISc. director, said he was happy they retained the ranking in the universities category. “We are working on improving our research and international position,” he said.

Educational institutions in the State in the engineering, medical and dental category have bagged several top spots. Seven out of the 40 top spots in the medical institutions category have been bagged by institutions in the State. Twenty-one out of the top 200 spots in the engineering category and 10 of the 30 spots under the dental category have been bagged by the State.


Doctors say they too need time to de-stress

Doctors say they too need time to de-stress

Death of doctor in Hassan district has the fraternity worried

12/06/2020
 
The death of a paediatrician on COVID-19 duty, reportedly following work-related stress, has upset the medical fraternity. They are all worried about their health as many, particularly those in government hospitals, have been working without taking a break for months.

Shivakiran, a paediatrician at the Alur taluk hospital, collapsed while on duty last week and suffered a hematoma. He died in the Hassan Institute of Medical Sciences in Hassan on Wednesday. He had been working at the hospital for the last three months without taking a weekly holiday or leave, like many others in the fraternity.

Appeal to govt.

Forums representing doctors have appealed to the State government to bring down pressure on the medical staff by taking necessary steps. K. Shankar, president of the Hassan unit of the Indian Medical Association (IMA), said, “It could be managed by dividing the staff into three batches and giving them breaks, holidays on rotation. The State body of the IMA has given its suggestions to the State government in this regard. I hope they will follow these steps to ease the situation.”

“We have all been working without a break all these days,” said a government medical officer, who wished not to be named. The staff members have been given the responsibility of handling fever clinics, where every patient has to be treated as a suspected COVID-19 patient.

“Forget leave, we have not availed of weekly holiday or general holiday in the last three months,” he said.

Even at the workplace, attending to the duty was not normal. They have to take extra care of themselves, besides attending to patients. There have been instances of public picking up arguments with doctors and other staff on the services provided.

“We cannot expect every visitor to be educated and be aware of the present condition. Many people walk in without masks. Sometimes we attend to accident cases where the injured is carried by a group of people. The staff members have to instruct all of them to wear masks and take precautionary measures. All this increase the stress on the staff,” said another doctor.

Besides the pressure at workplace, the doctors had difficulties in taking care of the family needs during the lockdown, said the doctor.

Decision soon on quota for govt. school students

Decision soon on quota for govt. school students

12/06/2020

Chief Minister Edappadi K. Palaniswami will soon make an announcement on providing exclusive reservation in medical college admission for government school students who clear NEET, School Education Minister K. A. Sengottaiyan said on Thursday.

Interacting with journalists after inaugurating a vegetable market in Erode, he said the Justice P. Kalaiyarasan Commission, appointed to analyse reasons for government school students not getting admission in medical colleges, submitted its report to Mr. Palaniswami on June 8.

Only after consultations, Mr. Palaniswami announced that all class 10 State board students would be declared “passed” based on quarterly and half-yearly exam marks and attendance. A decision on the fate of private candidates would be announced soon, he added.

High Court asks govt. about lockdown plans

High Court asks govt. about lockdown plans

12/06/2020

Justices Vineet Kothari and R. Suresh Kumar of the Madras High Court on Thursday sought to know whether the State government was planning to impose a complete lockdown in the territorial limits of the Greater Chennai Police.

Making it clear that he was posing the question as a common man, Justice Kumar said the situation was grim. Despite the government’s efforts, the number of people being infected in Chennai appeared to be rising, he noted.

Passenger-friendly timings for Madurai-Villupuram train

Passenger-friendly timings for Madurai-Villupuram train

Departure from Madurai at 8 a.m.; arrival at 7.30 p.m.

12/06/2020

Southern Railway has made changes in timings of Madurai-Villupuram-Madurai special trains with effect from Saturday.

Following feedback from passengers on the timing of the trains on both directions, the departure in Madurai has been delayed by an hour. But the departure from Villupuram has been advanced by 90 minutes.

The changes have been effected so that passengers can reach the railway station in Madurai with ease and go home earlier in the night when public transport is available.

With limited TNSTC bus services in the early morning, passengers found it difficult to reach Madurai station on time and catch the train at 7 a.m. Now, the train will depart at 8 a.m. Similarly, under the new timings, the train will arrive Madurai at 7.30 p.m. instead of 9.20 p.m. The passengers can use the TNSTC buses that are otherwise taken to depots at 9.30 p.m. under the relaxed lockdown conditions.

New timings

The train will leave Madurai at 8 a.m., Dindigul at 9 a.m., Tiruchi at 10.15 a.m., Ariyalur at 11.10 a.m. to reach Villupuram at 1.05 p.m. In the return direction, the train will depart Villupuram at 2.30 p.m., leave Ariyalur at 3.55 p.m., Tiruchi at 5.10 p.m., Dindigul at 6.17 p.m. and reach Madurai at 7.30 p.m.

Online viva voce at Alagappa university

Online viva voce at Alagappa university

12/06/2020

Alagappa University, Karaikudi, has initiated the process of conducting viva voce examinations for Ph.D. scholars through video conferencing.

According to a press release from the institution, till now two Ph.D. scholars have completed their viva voce through online platforms during May and the first week of June.

The viva voce is being conducted through Alagappa University’s online portal and other online platforms in accordance with recent UGC guidelines.

With the objective of helping Ph.D. scholars, Vice-Chancellor N. Rajendran permitted the online viva voce examinations.

The video conferencing was conducted in a dedicated room set up for this purpose.

Personal distancing norms are strictly being enforced during the conduct of the online examination.

More Ph.D. scholars will appear for viva voce online examinations during June and July, the press release added.
IIT-Madras top institution in government ranking

12/06/2020

With regard to medical education, All India Institute of Medical Sciences stands first, followed by Post Graduate Institute of Medical Education and Research, Chandigarh, and Christian Medical College, Vellore. 

The pharmacy category was topped by Jamia Hamdard University, while the newly introduced dental category had the Maulana Azad Institute of Dental Sciences in the first place.

Overall, 3,771 institutions registered in the ranking framework this year, which is a 20% increase in comparison to last year. All parameters are normalised to keep them size- and age-independent so as to ensure that larger and older institutions do not get any undue advantage.

Change of names of towns, cities sparks criticism

Change of names of towns, cities sparks criticism

Critics say there are several inconsistencies; officials say experts were consulted

12/06/2020

Thangam Thennarasu

The Tamil Nadu government’s notification changing names of 1,018 towns and cities has come in for criticism from various quarters, including a few Tamil language experts, who have questioned the inconsistencies in the process. The change of name from ‘Vellore’ to ‘Veeloor’ was criticised the most.

Senior officials in the Tamil Development Department told The Hindu that the names were finalised after experts looked at various suggestions. The team included linguistic experts proficient in Tamil and English. They clarified that the last column that provides the name changes also mentions “no change”. “This “no change” means that the names suggested by the Collectors will be maintained,” an official said.

When specifically asked how ‘Vellore’ became ‘Veeloor’, an official said, “It was based on ‘Nedil’ (long vowel) and ‘Kuril’ (short vowel) words.


For Vellore, in Tamil the word is ‘Waayloor’, ‘Nedil’, not ‘Wayloor’, ‘Kuril’. Hence in English, it becomes Veeloor,” a top official said.

Another official said once the new names come into effect, people will get used to them. “The Britishers changed a number of names to their convenience. People need to get used to the new names and it will be fine,” the official said.

Thennarasu’s remark

DMK MLA and former School Education Minister Thangam Thennarasu asked: “Firstly, is this the right time to make these announcements? Did some astrologer tell this government that changing the names of these places will drive away the COVID-19 virus?”

“You are saying Coimbatore is Koyampuththoor. But for Srivilliputtur, you are saying the correct spelling in English is Thiruvilliputthur. There is no consistency, there are errors” he said. “How can ‘Vellore’ become ‘Veeloor’? If you are going to say you went with ‘Kuril’, ‘Nedil’ words for the English names, why do you need a Tamil ‘Development’ Department,” he asked.

About Krishnagiri, he asked, “It is mentioned as Kirutinagiri district. It’s a gazette notification. How can Krishnagiri become Kirutinagiri? Have you made any announcement changing the name anywhere,” he asked.

Anna University ranked 12th

Anna University ranked 12th

University of Madras placed 41st in NIRF rankings

12/06/2020

The Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) Madras has retained the top rank in the National Institutional Ranking Framework (NIRF) released by the Ministry of Human Resource Development on Thursday.

Among the engineering colleges in the country, it has secured a score of 85.31, topping the list.

The State-run Anna University is ranked 12th among universities in the country and 14th among engineering educational institutes. In the overall category it is ranked 20th.

Architecture education

The university’s architecture education is ranked 18th among the top 20 institutes.

The University of Madras, however, came 41st in the NIRF rankings.

A total of 16 universities from Tamil Nadu, including private and public, feature among the top 100 institutions.

For the first time the Madras Medical College has figured among the top medical colleges and is ranked 12th. Christian Medical College in Vellore has been ranked third in the country.

Among the top 10 colleges are Presidency and Loyola College, both based in Chennai. The Presidency College’s ranking has, however, fallen from the third to the fifth position this year.

Now, senior doctors, PGs of anaesthesia institute test positive

Now, senior doctors, PGs of anaesthesia institute test positive

Routinely posted on COVID-19 duty in several high-risk wards of RGGGH

12/06/2020

Continuous COVID-19 duty has caused spike in infection among healthcare workers.
After the Department of Cardiology, a number of senior doctors and postgraduates at the Rajiv Gandhi Government General Hospital's (RGGGH) Institute of Anaesthesiology have tested positive for COVID-19. A majority of the PG doctors were posted in COVID-19 wards of the hospital.

In April, a number of PG doctors and staff nurses at the Department of Cardiology tested positive, following which the building housing the department was closed for disinfection. Recently, 15 doctors, including heads of department, of the Government Stanley Medical College Hospital also tested positive for the virus.

Sources confirmed that two chiefs of the Institute of Anaesthesiology had tested positive for COVID-19, while a total of 14 PGs, including four who were affected earlier, had been infected.

Doctors said that the anaesthetists, whose services ought to be utilised only for airway management in patients, were posted on COVID-19 duty in several wards, resulting in regular exposure to the infection.

“Anaesthesia PGs are posted on regular COVID-19 duty in eight-hour shifts. This includes wards 205 and 206, where symptomatic patients are received and tested. They are posted on the first floor of the Rheumatology Block (a COVID-19 facility), where sick patients are admitted, emergency operation theatre and at the trauma centre,” an official source said.

No rotation

Every day, at least 25 persons, including PGs and assistant professors of the department, are exposed to the infection.

“At least one-third of the workforce should be kept on reserve but many of the department staff are exposed to the infection at the same time. The chiefs have 24-hour COVID-19 duty once a week, and also go on ward rounds,” the source added.

Ideally, doctors from anaesthesia should be on-call duty for intubation.

Doctors recently performed emergency surgeries on two patients - one COVID-19 positive and another of unknown status. “We cannot wait for swab results for patients in need of emergency life-saving procedures. In the post-operative period, the sample of the second patient returned positive for COVID-19. Two of the PGs who were on the team later tested positive for COVID-19. We have one emergency operation theatre (OT) with two cubicles. If a COVID-19 patient undergoes a surgery, we fumigate the OT and utilise it later. We have been demanding a separate theatre for COVID-19 patients with negative pressure cubicles,” said a doctor, on condition of anonymity.

Tests not done

Apart from anaesthesia, doctors, including PGs, of the urology and neurosurgery departments at RGGGH have also tested positive. “Healthcare professionals/workers should be tested for COVID-19 routinely, but this is not being followed. Unnecessary movement of people into the hospital should be prevented. We find patients' relatives in the Severe Acute Respiratory Infection ward,” another doctor said.

Hospital authorities could not be reached for their comment.

Pulse oximeter – a solution at your fingertip, literally

Pulse oximeter – a solution at your fingertip, literally

It measures oxygen saturation in blood

12/06/2020

One of the answers to COVID-19 is probably at your fingertip, doctors say. With growing experience of dealing with sick people who report to hospitals with breathlessness, experts have recommended the use of a relatively cheap device at home that can forewarn you about any impending crisis – the pulse oximeter.

The small device, which fits into the palm of your hand, measures the oxygen saturation in the blood in a non-invasive manner. All one needs to do is clip the device onto a finger tip, and it will show the SpO2 level (peripheral oxygen saturation), or the oxygen level in the blood. Its role in COVID-19 patients’ health monitoring is significant.

“Silent hypoxia (deprivation of oxygen at the tissue level) has emerged as a major cause of death in COVID-19 patients,” said K. Kolandaswamy, former director of public health. “Usually, when your oxygen falls below 95%, you will have symptoms, breathlessness, a feeling of discomfort certainly. Now, in COVID-19, for some reason, that is not happening. Patients are not feeling the drop in oxygen levels at all until they are dangerously low. When they finally land up in hospital, they sometimes have a SpO2 of 80% or 75%, and are in respiratory distress,” he explained.

The pulse oximeter, priced upwards of ₹1,000, will prevent the patient from reaching this level of distress, he said. Daily monitoring of SpO2 levels will indicate if there is hypoxia, and in case the levels drop below 95%, it would be prudent to seek medical care, he added.

In government hospitals, patients’ SpO2 levels are monitored with a pulse oximeter and recorded at four-hour intervals. At the first sign of a drop in oxygen saturation, the patient is given high flow nasal oxygen in order to improve his or her condition. “We would advise people at home to buy this device and use it to test themselves often. Any drop below 95% is a cause for worry,” said a doctor at the Multi Super Speciality Hospital, Omandurar.

R. Jayanthi, dean, Rajiv Gandhi Government General Hospital, said intervention at an early stage, or detection of dropping oxygen saturation levels, could prevent deaths. When a cytokine storm occurs, there is supposed to be an “aberrant release of pro-inflammatory factors” that causes damage to the lungs and hypoxia, among other factors. Hence, noticing the drop in oxygen levels is key, experts pointed out. Unless prevented early, a cytokine storm sets in motion a cascade of events that becomes irreversible, and leads to death.

Health Secretary Beela Rajesh said a pilot project had been initiated at Chengalpattu Medical College, under which Bluetooth notifications would be sent to health workers from the pulse oximeter if the levels drop drastically. “All our hospitals and mobile teams have been instructed to use these devices, and they will also form part of the home kit we provide to people advised to go on home quarantine,” she said.

‘Will procure more’

The government will procure more pulse oximeters for the treatment of patients, especially those who are asymptomatic, Health Minister C. Vijayabaskar said. He said the government will launch a scheme under which the device will be provided to asymptomatic patients, who are allowed to remain in home quarantine, with conditions.

No proposal as of now to intensify lockdown curbs in four districts

No proposal as of now to intensify lockdown curbs in four districts

‘Govt. may have to consider the option sooner rather than later’

12/06/2020

The State government currently has no formal proposal to intensify the lockdown curbs in Chennai and three neighbouring districts, a top official has said.

But it may have to consider the option of allowing only essential services in the city sooner rather than later, he added.

If the government decides to go for this option, the restrictions it would entail are likely to be equivalent to what the State had witnessed under ‘Lockdown 1.0’, which began on March 25 and was in force for about a month.

On Thursday, Chennai, Kancheepuram, Chengalpattu and Tiruvallur accounted for as many as 1,624 of the 1,837 fresh COVID-19 cases reported across the State.

The present set of conditions is definitely expected to remain in force till Sunday, as Chief Minister Edappadi K. Palaniswami is currently in Salem, another official said.

‘Tighten movement’

Already, the police have been instructed to ‘tighten’ the movement of people out of Chennai, and e-passes are being issued only for ‘genuine cases’, the official said.

When asked whether any formal order had been issued for this, the official said there was “no need for any separate order”.

Thursday, June 11, 2020

'டிமிக்கி' ஊழியர்களுக்கு பதிவுத்துறை, 'கிடுக்கி'


'டிமிக்கி' ஊழியர்களுக்கு பதிவுத்துறை, 'கிடுக்கி'

Added : ஜூன் 10, 2020 23:36

சென்னை; சுழற்சி முறையை பின்பற்றி, வேலைக்கு வராமல் விடுப்பு எடுக்கும் ஊழியர்களுக்கு, கிடுக்கிபிடி போடும் வகையில், கட்டுப்பாடுகள் பிறப்பிக்கப்பட்டுள்ளன.தமிழகத்தில், அரசு அலுவலகங்கள், 50 சதவீத பணியாளர்களுடன் செயல்படும் என, அரசு அறிவித்துள்ளது.

அதற்கேற்ப, ஒவ்வொரு அலுவலகத்திலும் பணியாளர்கள், இரண்டு குழுக்களாக பிரிக்கப்பட்டு, சுழற்சி முறை அமல்படுத்தப்பட்டு உள்ளது.இதன்படி, திங்கள், செவ்வாய் கிழமைகளில் பணிக்கு வந்தவர்கள், வெள்ளி, சனிக்கிழமைகளில் பணிக்கு வந்தால் போதும். இதனால், 14 நாட்களில், ஆறு நாட்கள் வேலைக்கு வந்திருக்க வேண்டும்.

பதிவுத்துறை, வணிக வரித்துறைகளில், இந்த சுழற்சி முறை சரியாக பின்பற்றப்படவில்லை என, புகார் எழுந்தது. இதுகுறித்து, இத்துறையின் முதன்மை செயலர் என்.முருகானந்தம் பிறப்பித்த உத்தரவு:சுழற்சி முறையில் பணிக்கு வராமல், விடுப்பு எடுக்கும் ஊழியர்கள் மீது, நடவடிக்கை எடுக்கப்படும். குறிப்பாக, திங்கள், செவ்வாய் வேலைக்கு வர வேண்டிய நபர்கள், இந்த நாட்களில் விடுப்பு எடுத்து விட்டு, வெள்ளி, சனிக்கிழமை பணிக்கு வருகின்றனர்.

இதை தடுக்க, உரிய காரணமின்றி, திங்கள், செவ்வாய் கிழமைகளில் விடுப்பு எடுத்தால், அவர்களுக்கு, புதன், வியாழக்கிழமையும் விடுப்பாக கணக்கிடப்படும். எனவே, பணியாளர்கள் சுழற்சி முறைக்கு உட்பட்டு பணிபுரிவதை, மேலதிகாரிகள் உறுதி செய்ய வேண்டும்.இவ்வாறு, அதில் கூறப்பட்டுள்ளது.

'ஓட்டல்களில் வியாபாரம் இல்லை': நிபந்தனைகளை தளர்த்த கோரிக்கை


'ஓட்டல்களில் வியாபாரம் இல்லை': நிபந்தனைகளை தளர்த்த கோரிக்கை

Updated : ஜூன் 10, 2020 23:15 | Added : ஜூன் 10, 2020 22:02 

சென்னை,: ஓட்டல்களில் அமர்ந்து சாப்பிட, 50 சதவீத வாடிக்கையாளர்களுக்கு அனுமதி அளித்தும், வியாபாரம் இல்லாததால், நிபந்தனைகளை தளர்த்தும்படி, தமிழக அரசுக்கு, ஓட்டல்கள் சங்கத்தினர் கோரிக்கை விடுத்துள்ளனர்.

தமிழகத்தில், மார்ச் இறுதியில் ஊரடங்கு அமல்படுத்தப்பட்டதால், ஏப்ரலில் ஓட்டல்கள் மூடப்பட்டன. மே மாதம், ஓட்டல்களில், 'பார்சல்' மட்டும் வழங்க அனுமதிக்கப்பட்டது. அதனால், அனைத்து ஓட்டல்களும் செயல்படவில்லை. மேலும், பார்சல் வியாபாரமும், 10 சதவீதத்திற்கு கீழ் தான் இருந்தது. இம்மாதம், 8ம் தேதி முதல், ஓட்டல்களில், வாடிக்கையாளர்கள் அமர்ந்து, சாப்பிட அனுமதி அளிக்கப்பட்டது.

கொரோனா பரவலை தடுக்க, 'காலை, 6:00 முதல் இரவு, 8:00 மணி வரை செயல்பட வேண்டும். 'ஒரே நேரத்தில், மொத்த இருக்கையில், 50 சதவீத வாடிக்கையாளர்கள் மட்டும் அமர்ந்து சாப்பிட அனுமதிக்க வேண்டும்'மேஜை, நாற்காலிகளை கிருமி நாசினியால் அடிக்கடி சுத்தம் செய்ய வேண்டும்' என்பது உள்ளிட்ட நிபந்தனைகள் விதிக்கப்பட்டன.ஓட்டல்களில் அமர்ந்து சாப்பிட அனுமதி அளிக்கப்பட்டு, மூன்று நாட்களான நிலையிலும், வியாபாரம் இல்லாததால், நிபந்தனைகளை தளர்த்தும்படி, தமிழக அரசுக்கு, ஓட்டல்கள் சங்கத்தினர் கோரிக்கை விடுத்துள்ளனர்.தமிழக ஓட்டல்கள் சங்க தலைவர், வெங்கடசுப்பு கூறியதாவது:ஓட்டல்களில் அமர்ந்து சாப்பிட அனுமதி அளிக்கப்பட்ட நிலையில், பார்சலின் போது இருந்ததை விட, தற்போது, கூடுதலாக,- 3 சதவீதம் தான் வியாபாரம் நடக்கிறது.

அதேசமயம், துாய்மை பணிகளை மேற்கொள்வதால், 10 சதவீதம் கூடுதல் செலவு ஏற்பட்டுள்ளது.எனவே, ஓட்டல்களில், 50 சதவீத வாடிக்கையாளர்கள் அமர்ந்து சாப்பிட வேண்டும் என்ற நிபந்தனையை தளர்த்துவதுடன், இரவு, 10:00 மணி வரை செயல்பட, அரசு அனுமதிக்க வேண்டும். வாடிக்கையாளர்கள் மற்றும் ஊழியர்களின் பாதுகாப்பிற்காக, முக கவசம், கிருமி நாசினி வழங்குவது உட்பட, அனைத்து துாய்மை பணிகளையும், ஓட்டல் நிர்வாகத்தினர் ஏற்றுக் கொள்வர்.இவ்வாறு, அவர் கூறினார்.

13.48 கோடி முகக்கவசம் ரேஷன் கடைகளில் இலவசம்


13.48 கோடி முகக்கவசம் ரேஷன் கடைகளில் இலவசம்

Updated : ஜூன் 11, 2020 05:57 | Added : ஜூன் 11, 2020 04:52 

சென்னை: தமிழகத்தில், ரேஷன் கார்டுதாரர்களுக்கு, இலவசமாக முகக்கவசம் வழங்க, அரசு முடிவு செய்துள்ளது. அதற்காக, 13.48 கோடி முகக்கவசம் கொள்முதல் செய்ய, விலை நிர்ணய குழு அமைக்கப்பட்டுள்ளது.

தமிழகத்தில், கொரோனா நோய் பரவலை தடுக்க, அரசு பல்வேறு நடவடிக்கைகளை எடுத்து வருகிறது. அந்த வகையில், அனைத்து ரேஷன் கார்டுதாரர்களுக்கும், துணியில் தயாரிக்கப்பட்ட, முகக்கவசங்களை இலவசமாக வழங்க, அரசு முடிவு செய்துள்ளது.

தமிழகத்தில், 2.08 கோடி ரேஷன் கார்டுகள் உள்ளன. இவற்றில், 6.74 கோடி குடும்ப உறுப்பினர்கள் உள்ளனர். இவர்களுக்கு துணியில் தயாரிக்கப்பட்ட, தலா இரண்டு முகக்கவசங்கள் வீதம் வழங்க, 13.48 கோடி முகக்கவசங்கள் கொள்முதல் செய்ய வேண்டியுள்ளது. இதற்காக, முகக்கவசம் கொள்முதல் விலை நிர்ணயம் செய்ய, வருவாய் நிர்வாக ஆணையர் ராதாகிருஷ்ணன் தலைமையில், விலை நிர்ணய குழு அமைக்கப்பட்டுள்ளது.

இக்குழு உறுப்பினர்களாக, பேரிடர் மேலாண்மை இயக்குனர், பொது சுகாதாரம் தடுப்பு மருந்து இயக்குனர், தமிழ்நாடு மருத்துவ சேவை கழக மேலாண் இயக்குனர், நிதித்துறை துணைச் செயலர்கள், வருவாய் நிர்வாக ஆணைய தலைமை கணக்கு அலுவலர் ஆகியோர் இடம் பெற்றுள்ளனர்.

TN government alters English names of 1,018 places to match their Tamil pronounciation


TN government alters English names of 1,018 places to match their Tamil pronounciation

Hereafter the district Collectors will take steps for changing the names of these places through the local bodies concerned.

Published: 11th June 2020 12:11 AM | Last Updated: 11th June 2020 08:10 AM | A+A A-

Tamil Nadu CM Edappadi K Palaniswami (Photo | PTI)

By Express News Service

CHENNAI: The state government has issued a notification as per the recommendation of an experts committee for changing the names of 1,018 places, including of many important places, in accordance with how they are exactly pronounced in Tamil.

Hereafter the district Collectors will take steps for changing the names of these places through the local bodies concerned.

The announcement in this regard was made in December 2018. Though the G.O for the changed names was issued on April 1, the government has released it only on Wednesday.

Here's a list of some of these places:


Tondiyarpet - Thandaiyaarpettai


Purasawalkam - Purasaivaakkam


Vepery - Vepperi


Perambur - Peramboor


VOC Nagar - Va.OO.Si. Nagar


Kodungaiyur - Kodungaiyoor


Peravallur - Peravalloor


Siruvallur - Siruvalloor


Konnur - Konnoor


Koyembedu - Koyambedu


Egmore - Ezhumboor


Chintadripet - Chintadaripettai


Triplicane - Thiruvallikkeni


Mylapore - Mayilaappoor


Thiruvanmiyur - Thiruvanmiyoor


Mambalam - Maambalam


Saidapet - Saithaappettai


Ekkattuthangal - Eekkattuththaangal


Guindy Park - Gindi Poongaa


Thiyagaraya Nagar - Thiyaagaraaya Nagar


Pallikaranai - Pallikkaranai


Okkiam Thorappakkam - Okkiyam Thuraipakkam


Sholinganallur - Solinganalloor


Uthandi - Uththandi


Mugalivakkam - Mugalivaakkam


Manappakkam - Manappaakkam


Alandur - Aalandhoor


Meenambakkam - Meenambaakkam


Porur - Poroor


Nanganallur - Nangainallur


Adambakkam - Aadhambaakkam


Ambattur - Ambaththoor


Thiruvottriyur - Thiruvotriyoor


Dharmapuri - Tharumapuri


Madavaram - Maathavaram


Dharapuram - Tharaapuram


Coimbatore - Koyampuththoor


Gudalur - Koodaloor


Puducherry - Puthucherry (A place in TN)


Varagur - Varagoor


Talaivasal - Thalaivasal


Kandalur - Kaanthaloor


Thiruverambur - Thiruverumboor


Tuvagudi - Thuvakkudi


Manaparai - Manapparai


Chattrappatti - Chatthirappatti


Pudur - Puthoor


Uthamapalayam - Uthamapaalayam


Vellore - Veeloor


Pernambut - Peranaampattu


Vatalagundu - Vaththalakundu


Thiruvarur - Thiruvaroor


Muthupet - Muthuppettai


Tiruthuraipundi - Thirutthurai Poondi


Kudavasal - Kudavaasal


Nidamangalam - Needaamangalam


Orathanadu - Oratthanaadu


Kattur - Kaattoor

As cases spike in Chennai, hundreds of new doctors appointed


As cases spike in Chennai, hundreds of new doctors appointed

As four government hospitals in the city are filled fully, the Health Department is trying to add additional beds and appointing more doctors.

Published: 11th June 2020 04:00 AM | Last Updated: 11th June 2020 04:00 AM | A+A A-

For representational purposes (Photo | PTI)

By Express News Service

CHENNAI: The robust health infrastructure of Tamil Nadu is now bursting at its seams. With a whopping 1,927 new cases being reported on Wednesday, of which 1,392 were in Chennai, the requirement for hospital space is becoming a serious issue. As four government hospitals in the city are filled fully, the Health Department is trying to add additional beds. It is also appointing more doctors and paramedics to tackle the continuing spurt in cases. 

On Wednesday, Health Secretary Beela Rajesh handed over appointment letters to doctors recruited for Covid duty at the Directorate of Medical Education campus. A press statement claimed the government had appointed 574 postgraduate non-service doctors on a monthly salary of Rs 75,000 and 665 MBBS doctors on a monthly salary of Rs 60,000. The department also appointed 365 lab technicians on a monthly salary of Rs 15,000 and 1,230 multi-purpose health workers on a monthly salary of Rs 12,000. All the persons have been appointed on contract basis for three months.

More deaths

Among the deceased, four had no co-morbidities. The youngest among the dead was a 38-year-old man from Chengalpattu, who died at Rajiv Gandhi Government General Hospital on Monday, a day after testing positive. The State also tested 16,667 people on Wednesday. The number of persons who were discharged from hospitals stood at an impressive 1,008, pushing up the number of recovered cases across the State to 19,333. The death toll across the State now stands at 326 and active cases, at 17,179.

Overworked @home: New norm of work from home turning out to be a taxing one for employees


Overworked @home: New norm of work from home turning out to be a taxing one for employees

Logging extra hours, guilt-tripping on lack of productivity, and sacrificing family time — with office & home now under the same roof, WFH contours are not exactly a win

Published: 11th June 2020 04:34 AM | Last Updated: 11th June 2020 04:35 AM | A+A A-

illustration: tapas ranjan


Express News Service

CHENNAI: A bright white light pierced into my bedroom in the wee hours of a Wednesday. After tossing and turning for 15 minutes, I stepped out to check if some divine light had descended on our home, to take us away from the darkness called COVID-19. Alas! It was just light coming in from the hall where my father was working. He pointed towards his laptop, indicating that he was working on a report which was due in a few hours. Grunting, I went back to sleep. Between calls, video-calls, audits and report submission, he finally called it a day at 7 pm, after a 14-hour work schedule.

This was in April, and this pattern became his routine in the ensuing weeks. Known for travelling across the world and disrupting lives, the novel coronavirus has not only changed our habits, interactions and personal sense of fashion, it has also impacted the way we work. What was once a privilege that most of our US-based cousins, uncles and aunts boasted about, work-from-home has now become a new norm, albeit a taxing one for employees in India. Anxiety, work stress, and fewer hours with family have become the usual suspects of this new normal.

9 to 5 no more

My father, S Madhavan, lead auditor of a certification body, prefers starting early in the day because “the Internet speed is usually high then. It is easy for millennials to quickly adapt to this concept. But most people in my age group, including me, prefer having to go over files, and not upload or download anything.” And this is just one of the reasons that his work hours get prolonged. “I believe that the quantum of work is the same but the time taken to do it has increased. What we did in office from 9 to 5, we do at home for extra hours. Work from home depends on so many factors, especially the Internet speed; when the bars go down, our work-time goes up,” he shares.

For Sreenivas Kumar, a developer at a clinical research company, his laptop has become his trusted companion. “I wake up with my laptop and go to bed with it. I am with it all day,” he says. In the pre-COVID days, Sreenivas worked from 9 am to 6 pm. He ensured work was never brought into his abode. But now, the novel virus has brought with it novel problems. Besides the work stress, the absence of work-related set-up bothers him. “In my office, I have two 21-inch computers, an ergonomical chair and a perfect desk with everything to my liking. Now I have to do my work on a 14-inch laptop in an uncomfortable set-up,” he rues. 

A bachelor, Sreenivas also has the added responsibility of juggling work and house chores. “You need to prepare food, answer doorbells while in you are neck-deep in work…all this adds to extended work hours,” he frets. Echoing his feelings is Subadhra Shriram, a sales advisor and mother of two girls. “Your concentration is divided. As a mother, I have to tend to my kids too, but I am unable to because work takes priority, unintentionally. I also have to be mindful of where I work, how I work,” she opens up. 

The burden of expectations

In this new accommodation, the absence of commute has forced many employees to clock in extra hours. “We are expected to start working at the hour when we’d have otherwise left for office. For example, if you usually leave for office at 8.30 am, you are expected to start working from home then. There is a trust deficit on the employer’s part. They believe that while working from home, people tend to slack,” says Madhavan, whose company has set up daily calls at 2 pm, which continues till 4 pm. “When they want to talk to us face to face, then another call is scheduled over the weekend,” he shares. 
It is this worry of meeting expectations of both employers and clients that has kept Sreenivas and lakhs of his compatriots glued to their screen. With the economy already struggling to be back on its feet, pink slips and pay cuts have seemingly become de rigueur across industries. “Job security. That is our main concern. Though our company has ensured that there will be no job cuts, there is still a fear that lingers in the back of your mind. So you keep getting as many clients as you can from every nook and cranny, to prove your productivity,” Subadhra elaborates. 

And in some other cases like Sreenivas’ company, which is not facing troubled times so far, there have been some lay-offs. “A member in my team was laid off recently. So, his share of work was assigned to me. That is an extra workload,” he says, adding that he has no complaints considering productivity is a prime concern during the lockdown. While the WFH concept may be suitable for certain industries, for some others, it has come more as a bane than a blessing. Take journalists, for instance. With sources not ready to meet, no events in the foreseeable future — most journalists have not had the chance to go on-field to get their job done. “The first two weeks of the lockdown seemed interesting,” says Apoorva Mohan*, who works with an English daily.

“I saw people posting things on social media about cooking interesting dishes, taking up fitness seriously; so I thought maybe I can do that too. But when your home becomes your workspace, then it’s all seamless. I had to work according to the convenience of my sources, pick up the call when they called, sometimes wait for the call for hours on end. This made me feel like I worked the entire day, yet I was not being productive enough.”

RIP family time

The long working hours have also blurred the lines between weekdays and weekends. While Madhavan and Sreenivas have been trying their best to keep off work on weekends, Subadhra and Apoorva have little choice. “There were many calendar holidays in April and May. I had to work even on those days. The reason being — we are anyway at home,” says Subadhra. The present is tense for the youth population, which, Madhavan says, has been working continuously on weekends and holidays. “There is a general sense of fear of losing jobs among youngsters. So they never say no to their employers and the latter take advantage of that,” he opens up.

While one might assume that working remotely is a luxurious experience, the ground reality reveals otherwise. “Family time is just when I have my lunch or dinner. My father is a doctor and so I catch up with him about the virus and all the other happenings. There is no concept called me-time either. Sometimes, when something is due on Monday, I sacrifice even my weekends and all my free time to work on that,” says Sreenivas. 

For Subadhra, it has become difficult to channel the energy of her kids aged five years, and nine months. “They want to play with me or just want to spend time with me, but calls keep me busy. My elder daughter understands that I am working but sometimes she also has a meltdown. Another thing that bothers me is that my kids are getting lesser time to interact with their father, as he works in Dubai. Due to the time difference, whenever he calls me I am in the midst of work. When I get free and call him, the kids are asleep by then. Routines — be it work or family-related – have been disrupted,” she worries. 
Malavika Sankararaman, a regulatory professional – medical devices in Ireland, faced a similar conundrum when she came down to India in March. The lockdown was announced down and her company permitted her to work from home.

Assuming this as an opportunity to spend quality time with her family, she felt thankful. However, a week into it, she realised that she spent even lesser time with them than before. “I followed fixed office timings of 8.5 hours but while working from home, I somehow ended up working for 12-14 hours daily, even though the same job was being done. Despite, toiling for more hours and delivering quality work, I always felt guilty of not being productive as I was working from my “home”. After a point, working from home made me feel like I was living in my office,” she narrates.

With home and office now under the same roof, boundaries that remained between personal and professional life seem to have completely disappeared.The brunt of being ‘available’ beyond normal working hours coupled with the impossibility of disconnecting has made work-from-home anything but a win. Overworked and stressed, they are all eager to go back to the comforts of their office. And with many companies being granted permission to work at 50 per cent capacity, we hope Subadhra and her ilk have their wish fulfilled.

*Name changed (Inputs by Roshne Balasubramanian)

NEWS TODAY 25.12.2024