Tuesday, June 16, 2020

Concession for students who tested positive

Concession for students who tested positive

14/06/2020

After two cases of SSLC students testing positive for COVID-19, the Karnataka Secondary Education and Examination Board has maintained that they can take supplementary examinations and will be considered as fresh candidates.

Director of the board V. Sumangala told The Hindu that instructions have been given to Block Education Officers and other officials.

The board has also taken various measures to educate students on the dos and don’ts while appearing for their papers.

Ms. Sumangala said that more than 3,500 officials and staff have been trained in the SOP to be followed at examination centres.

“Students need to follow various health protocols, such as wearing masks, sanitising hands, maintaining personal hygiene, social distancing and others. We have also advised them to bring their own water bottles and boxes of food. We will soon release a video on the regulations for students and parents,” she said. To create awareness and dispel rumours, pamphlets will be distributed and information will be displayed at centres.

Shah, Vardhan to chair crucial meetings

Shah, Vardhan to chair crucial meetings

14/06/2020

Union Home Minister Amit Shah and Health Minister Harsh Vardhan will chair two crucial meetings to assess the COVID-19 situation in the capital on Sunday.

Lieutenant-Governor Anil Baijal, Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal and Randeep Guleria, Director, All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS), will attend both meetings.

Sources said a plan revolving around the “joint efforts of all the agencies possible” was on the anvil. This was also likely to include opening up of the “unutilised” municipal hospitals, dispensaries and properties, said a source.

The first meeting, scheduled for 11 a.m., will be attended by the Union Home and Health Ministers, Mr. Baijal, Mr. Kejriwal and Dr. Guleria. The second meeting, at 5 p.m., will also have the Mayors and Commissioners of the three BJP-ruled civic bodies.

Maharashtra cuts test rates at private labs

Maharashtra cuts test rates at private labs

Home collection of samples to cost only ₹2,800 now

14/06/2020 

There has been a growing demand in the State to reduce the testing charges.
The Maharashtra government on Saturday cut the cost of the COVID-19 test at private laboratories from ₹4,500 to ₹2,800 for home collection of samples. The rate is ₹2,200 if samples are collected from hospitals.

Health Minister Rajesh Tope said there was a growing demand for slashing the cost. “We had set up a committee to look into the pricing. It studied all the aspects and has decided on the rates,” he said in a video released by him. “There is a plenty of testing kits available now, and the price of kits has also come down. Therefore, laboratories should not look at profiteering,” he said.

Maharashtra has so far carried out over 6.4 lakh tests, including 2.5 lakh in Mumbai. While the State’s daily average has gone up to 15,000 in the past three days, Mumbai’s daily average is 4,500. Maharashtra’s case positivity rate is 16.18% and Mumbai’s 22%.

“With such a high positivity rate, especially in Mumbai, the incidence of cases will be much higher. Therefore, the testing has to go up,” said Soumitra Ghosh, a professor of the School of Health System Studies at the Tata Institute of Social Sciences. He said one of the major flaws in dealing with the outbreak was lack of aggressive contact-tracing. “The staff on duty surely is tired. But the government has to strategise, bring in new hands to do the job,” he said.

The committee that worked on the test cost has said government laboratories are not utilising 100% of their capacity. It said they should work 24/7 in multiple shifts, and a nodal officer should distribute sample loads. To reduce the cost of tests at private laboratories, the government should consider waiver of or a reduction in the GST and regulate the rates of consumables such as viral transport medium, personal protective equipment, extraction kits and RT-PCR kits.

‘Global ranking parameters to assess institutions are skewed’

‘Global ranking parameters to assess institutions are skewed’

14/06/2020

Indian educational institutions fare poorly on global assessments — like in this week’s QS World University Rankings — as their parameters are skewed, says IIT-Delhi director V. Ramgopal Rao, suggesting that if a parameter on the cost of education was included, Indian institutes would rank in the top 50. In an interview with The Hindu, he suggested that the government highlight the conflicts of interest in the business model of ranking agencies, and also launch a global campaign on the lines of Incredible India to improve the perception of Indian higher education worldwide.

Why are Indian institutions struggling to rise on these kinds of international rankings?

On three parameters, Indian institutions don’t do well. In international faculty and international students, we get zero points as they look at the ratio of Indian to international students. On faculty-student ratio also, we perform very poorly, because we only count full-time faculty. But in a U.S. institution, even PhD students who teach a class, teaching assistants and research assistants, are included.

Of the remaining parameters, one is research impact. We actually don’t do very badly. Last year, we were close to the 40th rank. The rest is all perception. In India, everybody knows us, what we are doing. But how many times do you hear of an IIT in Japan or Australia or New Zealand? Even a second-tier institution in the U.S. would be perceived to be better than a top institution in India. It also goes with the image of the country.

Are these rankings useful in the Indian context?

Well, the media is taking it seriously and it becomes front page news.

The media has been taking it more seriously in the last couple of years because the government is taking it seriously. The Institute of Eminence scheme uses these rankings as a benchmark.

These rankings are not being fair to India. For example, let them introduce a parameter on the cost of education. For a certain quality of education, how much do our students pay and how much would a student in the U.S. pay? If you introduce that and give it 20% weightage, Indian institutions will compete with the best in the U.S. These rankings all depend on what parameters you have and who benefits from that. These are all designed to pull up institutions in those countries.

Do the benchmarks mentioned in IoE scheme need to be changed?

In terms of measurable parameters, we can improve. For example, our research budget at IIT-D has gone up from ₹100 crore to ₹500 crore in the last four years. Even if you look at our citations, we have been growing, in terms of the number of papers, at least 20% per year. We would have doubled in the last five years. But if you look at our international rankings, nothing has changed.

The Ministry says it has now formed a committee, including IIT directors to improve perception...

The problem is that if I need to launch a campaign for IIT-Delhi, let’s say in New Zealand, I cannot do that. I don’t have resources to launch a campaign for my own institute. It has to be done at the government level. If the government launches a Study in India campaign for Indian education using a brand-building company and then advertises it on CNN, BBC, I think that would have created an image for our institutions.

In the absence of that, it is difficult given that perception gets 50% weightage in some of these rankings.

You have mentioned the possibility of using NIRF rankings globally. How would that work?

NIRF is very transparent, it has government backing, and everything is based on the data. So I’m saying NIRF can join hands with QS or THE and then define parameters which suit Indian institutions.

Faulty data behind AMU’s slide in national rankings’

Faulty data behind AMU’s slide in national rankings’

V-C urges HRD Ministry to rectify error

14/06/2020

Aligarh Muslim University has 2,911 full-time research scholars. According to the Centre’s National Institutional Ranking Framework (NIRF), however, the university has only 33.

The faulty data resulted in AMU slipping from 18th to 31st place in the rankings released earlier this week.

“This discrepancy in the number of PhD students enrolled at AMU has resulted in a false steep decline in our ranking,” university’s Vice-Chancellor Tariq Mansoor said in a letter to the National Board of Accreditation and Human Resource Development Minister Ramesh Pokhriyal Nishank on Friday. “A higher NIRF ranking not only translates into better employment opportunities for students, but also forms an important basis for future funding, infrastructure support and other assistance by various government and other agencies.”

He urged the HRD Ministry to rectify the discrepancy immediately.

NIRF sources much of the data from institutions themselves. Prof. Mansoor said correct data, sent by email in March 2020 and also uploaded on the AMU website, showed the number of full time PhD graduates over the last three years was between 312 and 387. However, the NIRF site shows only 8-10 each year.

Three PG students test positive

Three PG students test positive

14/06/2020

Three postgraduate students of Thoothukudi Medical College Hospital have tested positive for COVID-19 on Saturday.

Two postgraduate students attached to the Department of Anaesthesia and another one belonging to the Department of Surgery tested positive for the viral infection after they were part of the team of doctors who performed surgery on a patient admitted to the Emergency and Trauma Care ward.

“Since we can’t wait for the results of the samples drawn from the patients requiring emergency care, including surgery, we had to go in for surgical intervention on a patient admitted recently. As the patient tested positive for COVID-19 later, the three have caught the viral infection,” said sources. They have been admitted to the ward meant for COVID -19 positive doctors in Thoothukudi Medical College Hospital.

Meanwhile, Tirunelveli Corporation sealed a leading jewellery showroom on Saturday after six of its employees, including two women, tested positive for the viral infection. The screening was conducted on Friday after one of its employees tested positive for COVID-19 on Thursday.

The showroom will remain sealed till Monday as disinfection goes

Centre for early use of HCQ

Centre for early use of HCQ

‘It must be avoided in severe cases’

14/06/2020

The Health Ministry on Saturday said the anti-malarial drug hydroxychloroquine (HCQ) should be used as early as possible in the course of COVID-19 treatment to achieve meaningful effects and should be avoided in patients with severe disease. A 22-page national clinical management protocol provides for the management of cases based on the clinical severity of mild, moderate or severe, the Ministry said.

The new protocol includes use of remdesivir and off-label use of tocilizumab and convalescent plasma therapy on specific groups of patients. Also, while HCQ will continue to be in use, antibiotic azithromycin is no longer a part of the treatment protocol. The Ministry said patients are reporting symptoms like fever, cough, fatigue, shortness of breath, among others.

“Loss of smell (anosmia) or loss of taste (ageusia) preceding the onset of respiratory symptoms has also been reported,” the protocol said. It added that older people and immune-suppressed patients in particular may present with atypical symptoms such as fatigue, reduced alertness, reduced mobility, diarrhoea, loss of appetite, delirium, and absence of fever. Children might not have reported fever or cough as frequently as adults.
RGGGH dean goes on ‘medical leave’

14/06/2020

R. Jayanthi, dean of Madras Medical College (MMC) and Rajiv kGandhi Government General Hospital (RGGGH), has “proceeded on leave”.

K. Narayanasamy, director and professor of Hepatology, MMC, will hold full additional charge with immediate effect until further orders and has been vested with all financial and administrative powers hitherto exercised by the dean, according to an official communication from R. Narayana Babu, Director of Medical Education. It refers to a telephonic message received from the dean on June 12. An official said that Dr. Jayanthi is on medical leave and it was not related to COVID-19.

Several doctors and postgraduate students tested positive for COVID-19 in the last few days. This included senior doctors of the Institute of Anaesthesiology and PGs residing at the MMC’s Men’s Hostel. Nearly 65 persons affiliated to the institution were isolated at ESI Ayanavaram.

Salaries of MLAs cut by 30% in Gujarat


Salaries of MLAs cut by 30% in Gujarat

Ahmedabad:

In a significant decision, the Gujarat government on Monday decided to effect a 30% pay cut in the salaries of the chief minister, other ministers and MLAs for a period of one year.

The state government has also decided to suspend the dearness allowance (DA) of government employees for the period from January 1, 2020 to July 1, 2021.

The revenue of the state government is expected to fall by between ₹24,500 crore and ₹26,000 crore in the ongoing financial year because of the lockdown, deputy chief minister Nitin Patel said in Gandhinagar on Monday.

As an austerity measure, the government has announced a pay cut of 30% in the salaries of the chief minister, ministers and MLAs for a period of one year to reduce the burden on the state exchequer, Nitin Patel said. TNN

HC permits airlines to allow passengers on middle seats

Mumbai: 16.06.2020

The Bombay high court on Monday permitted all flightoperatorsto allow passengers to occupy middle seats in flights, but said they should strictly comply with guidelines of the Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) on measures to prevent the spread of Covid-19.

A division bench of Justices S J Kathawalla and S P Tavade refused to accept the contentions raised in a petition filed by Air India pilot Deven Kanani, who said the middle seats of all international and domesticflightsshouldbekept vacant to preventthespreadof coronavirus. “We are of the prima facie view that the safety and health of passengers on board the aircraftqua (with regardto) Covid-19 virus is adequately taken careof even if the middle seat of the aircraft is not kept vacant on account of passenger load and seat capacity, the courtsaid.Thecourt permitted air carriersto allow passengers to occupy the middle seat in flights, but said they should strictly comply with DGCA's guidelines on measures to be taken to prevent spread of the coronavirus.

The DGCA in its May 31circular said flight operators should try to keep the middle seat vacant but if it has been booked, then the passenger shall be provided with a wraparound gown in addition to the mask and face shield. If possible, passengersfrom onefamily or those travelling in one group could be allotted seats along with the middle seat, it said in the circular. The court in its order said it has not seen any material to show wrongdoing on partof theAir India andAir India Express or violating circulars issued by the DGCA on March 23 and endangering the lives of passengers travelling back to India from abroad in the Vande Bharat flights. The bench noted that all precautionary measures, asstipulated with regard to passengers and the crew, are complied with by all flight operators. TNN

People in containment zones may have to pay six months’ power bill at one go


People in containment zones may have to pay six months’ power bill at one go

Sivakumar.B@timesgroup.com

Chennai:16.06.2020

As citizens struggle to stave off the virus threat, they may have to get ready for another shock from the state power utility, Tangedco, which has decided to postpone assessment of power bills to August in containment areas across the state.

The decision may jack up power bills of consumers, and a household that pays ₹2,000 once every two months may end up paying ₹10,000 to ₹12,000 for six months, without any significant increase in consumption.

Tangedco’s financial wing has instructed superintending engineers (a copy of the circular is with TOI) not to send assessors to containment areas to take EB meter reading and had asked consumers to make payments in June as per their last bill (April bill) and reading will be taken only in August.

Though the state government has asked consumers to pay their bill as per their last meter reading, the power utility has decided to consider these interim payments only as advances against their final bill which will be calculated on a later date.

In TN, power tariff on domestic or household consumers is dynamic and not fixed. It keeps changing depending on the units consumed. For example, while power consumed up to 200 units is charged at ₹2.50 per unit, it is ₹3 per unit between 200 and 500 units when the total bimonthly bill is up to 500 units.

When the total bimonthly consumption goes beyond 500 units, the tariff would be ₹4.60 per unit from 200 to 500 units and ₹6.60 per unit for consumption above 500 units.

This variable component will push a normal consumer who may be in the ₹2.50-perunit bucket under bimonthly billing to the top slot of Rs.6.60 per unit if his consumption is clubbed and calculated for three bimonthly periods in August. This will increase the payment burden of consumers manifold, depending on how early or late the final billing will be done by Tangedco.

According to M Annamalai, a resident of Anna Nagar whose normal bimonthly payment is ₹3,410, “Our consumption since February would be 3,400 units if the reading is taken now and we may have to pay ₹15,000. But if another two months’ consumption gets added to the bill, our final bill will be more than ₹23,000 even if we make an interim payment as per our last bill. I am a private sector employee. It will be difficult for me to pay such huge amount il at one go in August,” Annamalai said.

“Tangedco must allow self-assessment by consumers and they must be allowed to pay as per meter reading taken by them. The reading can be shared with local assistant engineer who can then raise the bills,” he said.

But Tangedco officials defended the discom’s decision. “Regulation 10 of TNE supply code deals with rules to be followed when meters are not accessible for calculating consumption. The Covid-19 outbreak has created an extraordinary situation, and there is no specific relief allowed in the code for containment zones,” they said.

But official promised to take up the issue with senior officials to save consumers in containment zones from ending up paying six months bill together.


Tangedco’s financial wing has instructed superintending engineers not to send assessors to containment areas to take EB meter reading
PIL to declare lockdown illegal

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Chennai:16.06.2020

A city resident has moved the Madras high court seeking to declare lockdown announced by the central and the state governments to contain Covid-19 outbreak as illegal. M Immanvuel of Kovilambakkam argued that the lockdown had no legal sanction and the government did not have power to implement such lockdowns either under the Epidemics Act or the Disaster Management Act.

Recording the submission, a division bench of Justice R Subbiah and Justice Krishnan Ramaswamy ordered notice to the state government and said it would pass orders on June 17.

The petitioner wanted the court to direct the government to lift the lockdown immediately as it restricts basic movement of people. “Restrictions on the movement of people like curfew are no way relatable in containing the spread of Covid-19 as long as social distancing and wearing a mask is adhered. These restrictions have only affected the livelihood of 93% total workforce of the country,” he said.

Though the restrictions have been liberalised, there are many unreasonable restrictions which are in total violation of the fundamental rights, he added.

Sunday, June 14, 2020

Stop issuing certificates for EWS quota, TN tells collectors


Stop issuing certificates for EWS quota, TN tells collectors

Julie.Mariappan@timesgroup.com

Chennai:14.06.2020

In a major policy decision, the state government has instructed revenue officials not to issue income and asset certificates for Economically Weaker Sections (EWS) in general category. It has also withdrawn circulars issued last year permitting officials to issue certificates for reservation under EWS. The government circular dated June 4 has been sent to all district collectors asking them to instruct tahsildars not to issue such certificates for EWS applicants.

“The state insists the certificates need not be given since it has not adopted the EWS quota. It has not taken a policy decision yet,” said a senior official. A section in the government, however, expressed concerns about the prospects of EWS beneficiaries getting affected in accessing central government jobs and admission to professional courses.

Incidentally, the state cabinet led by Edappadi K Palaniswami will meet on Monday to give its nod for promulgation of an ordinance providing for 10% horizontal reservation for government school students in medical courses.

No mention of reservation for poor in Constitution: DMK

The BJP government at the Centre introduced the quota for the poor in the general category, hitherto not covered by any reservation, under 103rd constitutional amendment, the validity of which has been challenged in the court. In its affidavit before the Supreme Court in January, the Centre said the states were free to decide on implementing the quota system. “The state government need not give EWS quota because it is enabling constitutional amendment and not a mandatory fundamental right as such to be enforceable in the court of law. This is the discretion of the state to do or not to do,” senior advocate K M Vijayan said. The state government has taken note of the open category, which is less than 4% of the population in the state.

It was only on Thursday did the Supreme Court refuse to hear a batch of petitions from political parties in Tamil Nadu seeking 50% OBC quota for medical courses under All India Quota (AIQ), on the ground that no fundamental right had been violated entitling parties to move the Supreme Court directly.

In its guidelines issued in May last year in line with the constitutional amendment, the state government said persons not covered under the existing scheme of reservations for the SCs, the STs, and the socially and educationally backward classes and whose family had a gross annual income below Rs 8 lakh are to be identified as EWSs for the benefit of reservation.

An all-party meeting convened by the AIADMK government in July turned inconclusive, as parties like Congress, BJP and CPM supported the quota and DMK and the regional parties opposed it. The government decided to seek legal opinion on the issue. “ The Constitution talks of reservation only for socially and educationally backward, and there is no mention of economically backward,” DMK MP and spokesperson T K S Elangovan said.

Spike in COVID-19 cases force travel ban for government staff in Vellore

Spike in COVID-19 cases force travel ban for government staff in Vellore

If anybody wants to go out of the district for any emergencies, he/she should take prior permission from the concerned head of the department.

Published: 14th June 2020 12:22 AM | Last Updated: 14th June 2020 12:22 AM |

Samples being collected from visitors entering Vellore. (Photo | Express)
By Express News Service

VELLORE: The government officers and employees in Vellore district have been directed not to travel out of the district as COVID-19 positive cases have witnessed spike since the lockdown was eased from 1 June.

The district reported 128 positive cases from 1 June to 12 June and most of the positive cases were returnees of Chennai city.

Given the situation taking alarming proportions, the district collector recently issued an advisory to government officers and employees not to take trips outside the district and if at all anyone wants to go out of the district needed to obtain prior permission, an official said.

“Several government staff used to visit Chennai during the weekend. Now, the spike in positive cases is triggered by visitors thronging the district from the capital city. So, as a precautionary action, the government staff have been asked to avoid trips,” he noted.

The official added that if anybody wants to go out of the district for any emergencies, he/she should take prior permission from the concerned head of the department.

Tests taken at check posts

Meanwhile, samples are being collected from visitors entering into Ranipet, Vellore and Tirupathur districts from other places including Chennai.

Enclosures have been set up at the check posts in Ponniamman Medu, Pallur, Pudukesavaram, Shanagar, Rettaikulam and Pilanchi in Ranipet district border, Arabakkam in Vellore district and Madhanur in Tirupathur district, officials said.

Besides taking samples, the travelers were advised on precautionary measures to fight the global pandemic.

Even two wheelers entering into Ranipet district were asked to produce e-pass to curtail influx of people from Chennai, Kancheepuram and Tiruvalluvar districts.

Administrative reasons for Beela Rajesh's transfer: Minister D Jayakumar


Administrative reasons for Beela Rajesh's transfer: Minister D Jayakumar

Min D Jayakumar said this while inspecting a containment work

Published: 14th June 2020 05:39 AM | Last Updated: 14th June 2020 05:39 AM 

Fisheries Minister D Jayakumar inspects Covid-19 containment work at Navalar Nedunchezhian Nagar and distributes kabasura kudineer to residents

By Express News Service

CHENNAI: Fisheries Minister D. Jayakumar, on Saturday, said that former Health Secretary Beela Rajesh was transferred purely due to administrative reasons and there was no ulterior motive behind it. “We cannot question administrative decisions,” he said, answering a question by a reporter after he inspected COVID-19 containment work in Navalar Nedunchezhian Nagar where seven people have tested positive so far. 

Reiterating the need for wearing masks, washing hands with soap and maintaining social distancing, the Minister said that the war against the virus can be won only with the cooperation of the public. On the allegations that the State Government had downplayed the deaths during the pandemic, the Minister said that the Government had no reason to hide deaths and that such COVID-19 deaths cannot be hidden.

He said that the Government was focused on controlling the cases in the city. “A total of 38,000 staff from various departments including Corporation, Health and others are on the field. Of them, 11,000 are involved in getting statistics by undertaking door-to-door surveys,” he said.

“Further, we have identified 8 lakh people across the city who are vulnerable and have comorbidities to track them regularly,” he added. He also said that the relaxations to the lockdown cannot be blamed for increasing cases. “Protecting livelihoods and controlling COVID-19 are on two parallel tracks,” he said.

Dr Narayansamy takes over as dean for Rajiv Gandhi Government General Hospital, MMC


Dr Narayansamy takes over as dean for Rajiv Gandhi Government General Hospital, MMC

According to the order, Dr Narayanasamy has been vested with full administrative and financial powers exercised by a Dean of the hospital.

Published: 14th June 2020 01:17 AM | Last Updated: 14th June 2020 01:17 AM 

Rajiv Gandhi Government General Hospital. (Photo | Shiba Prasad Sahu, EPS)
By Express News Service

CEHNNAI: Continuing the change in top posts at the Health Department, Dr K Narayansamy, Director and Professor of Hepatology at MMC will now be holding the additional charge as Dean of MMC and Rajiv Gandhi Government General Hospital after Dr R Jayanthi has gone on leave until further notice. 

In an order dated on June 12, Director of Medical Education Dr R Narayanababu has appointed Dr K Narayanasamy as the dean of MMC and RGGGH, with immediate effect until further orders. 

When queried, Dr Narayanababu told Express that Dr Jayanthi was feeling unwell since last week and she has gone on leave. “Her health condition is not related to COVID. It is not sure when she would return,’’ he said. 

According to the order, Dr Narayanasamy has been vested with full administrative and financial powers exercised by a Dean of the hospital.

In the recent developments, Dr J Radhakrishnan had replaced Dr Beela Rajesh as Health Secretary while before that, Dr TS Selvavinayagam replaced Dr K Kolandasamy, who went on retirement.

ரிவர்ஸ் வேக்ஸினாலஜி முறையில் பரிசோதனை தீவிரம்; விரைவில் கொரோனாவுக்கு மருத்து...எம்ஜிஆர் பல்கலை. துணைவேந்தர் சுதா சேஷையன் தகவல்


ரிவர்ஸ் வேக்ஸினாலஜி முறையில் பரிசோதனை தீவிரம்; விரைவில் கொரோனாவுக்கு மருத்து...எம்ஜிஆர் பல்கலை. துணைவேந்தர் சுதா சேஷையன் தகவல்

2020-06-14@ 10:59:18

சென்னை: சீனாவின் வுகான் நகரில் இருந்து பரவிய கொரோனா வைரஸ், உலக நாடுகளை அச்சுறுத்தி வருகிறது. உலகளவில் இதுவரை 78 லட்சத்துக்கும் அதிகமானோர் இந்த வைரசால் பாதித்துள்ளனர். 4 லட்சத்துக்கும் அதிகமானோர் இறந்துள்ளனர். இந்தியாவில் பாதிக்கப்பட்டோர் எண்ணிக்கை 3,20,922 ஆக அதிகரித்துள்ளது. கொரோனாவால் இதுவரை 9195 பேர் உயிரிழந்த நிலையில் 1,62,379 பேர் கொரோனா பிடியில் இருந்து குணமடைந்து வீடு திரும்பியுள்ளனர். இந்த கொடிய வைரசை கட்டுப்படுத்தும் மருந்தை கண்டுபிடிக்கும் ஆராய்ச்சியில் பல்வேறு நாடுகள் தீவிர ஆராய்ச்சியில் ஈடுபட்டு வருகின்றன.

இதற்கிடையே, ரிவர்ஸ் வேக்ஸினாலஜி முறையில், கொரோனா வைரஸை தடுக்கும் புரதம் கண்டுபிடிக்கப்பட்டு உள்ளது. கொரோனா தடுப்பு மருந்து கண்டுபிடிப்பதில், முதற்கட்ட ஆராய்ச்சி வெற்றி அடைந்துள்ளது. இந்த மருந்து ஓராண்டுக்குள் செயல்பாட்டுக்கு வரும். மனிதர்களுக்கு செலுத்தி ஆய்வு மேற்கொள்ளும் அடுத்தகட்ட நடவடிக்கை விரைவில் தொடங்கும் என கடந்த ஏப்ரல் மாதம் எம்ஜிஆர் பல்கலை. துணைவேந்தர் சுதா சேஷையன் தெரிவித்திருந்தார்.

இந்நிலையில், விரைவில் கொரோனாவுக்கு மருத்து எம்ஜிஆர் மருத்துவ பல்கலைக்கழக துணைவேந்தர் சுதா சேஷையன் தகவல் தெரிவித்துள்ளார். ரிவர்ஸ் வேக்ஸினாலஜி ஆராய்ச்சி பணிகள் தொடர்ந்து நடைபெற்று வருகிறது. ரிவர்ஸ் வேக்ஸினாலஜி முறையில் கண்டறியப்பட்ட புரதத்தை பரிசோதனை செய்யும் முயற்சி தீவிரமாக நடைபெற்று வருகிறது. 2-ம் கட்ட ஆராய்ச்சி பணிகள் இன்னும் முடியவில்லை. விலங்குளை கொண்டு தீவிர பரிசோதனை மேற்கொள்ளப்படுகிறது. ஆராய்ச்சி பணிகள் முடிந்தவுடன் விவரங்களை தருகிறேன் என்றும் கூறியுள்ளார். 

இஸ்ரேல் ஆராய்ச்சியாளர்கள்;

மத்திய இஸ்ரேலில் உள்ள, பார் இலன் பல்கலைக் கழகத்தின் ஆராய்ச்சியாளர்கள், கொரோனா வைரசின் மூலக்கூறுகளை கண்டுபிடித்து விட்டதாக அறிவித்துள்ளனர். இந்த வைரசின் ஆன்டிஜன், புரதசத்துகள் மற்றும் ஆற்றல் மிகுந்த 2 எபிடோப்புகள் கண்டறியப்பட்டு உள்ளன. இவற்றின் செயல்பாடுகளின் அடிப்படையில் விரைவில் கொரோனாவுக்கு எதிரான மருந்தை கண்டுபிடிக்க முடியும் என்றும் இஸ்ரேல் ஆராய்ச்சியாளர்கள் குறிப்பிட்டுள்ளனர்.

Round 2 Reporting: MCC Issues Directions To Candidates

Round 2 Reporting: MCC Issues Directions To Candidates 

By Garima 

Published On 13 Jun 2020 5:20 PM 

New Delhi: Since there is an immediate need of doctors for the management of patients in the hospital during this unprecedented prevailing situation due to the COVID outbreak, the Medical Counselling Committee (MCC), while calling the PG medical candidates for Round 2 reporting, has released a list of instructions for them. 

Considering the coronavirus outbreak, it has become mandatory to conduct Reporting for Round-2 in PHYSICAL MODE/ OFFLINE MODE which is scheduled to start from 16th June 2020. 

Candidates will have to report physically to the allotted college along with original documents. Outstation candidates are advised to contact the allotted college authorities beforehand w.r.t Quarantine rules/Local Administration Guidelines of the State/ City before traveling. In order to facilitate the Physical Reporting of candidates a DO Letter from Health Secretary, MoHFW is attached below for treating Allotment Letter as Curfew Pass/ e- Pass. 

Candidates are advised to take note of the following points: Ø 

Use of 'Aarogya Setu App' may be mandatory in many areas/ colleges. Hence, it is highly advised to download the App. And show to State authorities, if required. Ø 

All Guidelines issued by Govt. of India/ State Govt. should be followed. The Directorate General of Health Services, Government of India, New Delhi has been entrusted with the responsibility to conduct Online Counselling for allotment of Post Graduate (MD/MS/Diploma and MDS) seats to the eligible and qualified candidates as per the directions of the Hon'ble Supreme Court of India in I.A. No. 16 of 2012 in Civil Appeal No. (s). 1944 of 1993 in the matter of `Anand S. Biji V/s State of Kerala &Ors.'. 

The Counselling for Round 2 of NEET PG Counselling, 2020 has commenced from 3rd June 2020 and physical reporting for joining allotted Medical/Dental Colleges across the Country shall commence from 15th June 2020. Joining of these Doctors at respective Medical/Dental Colleges is essential for the maintenance of healthcare facilities of various Colleges and Hospitals and their services are required at this juncture. 

In order to facilitate the smooth functioning of the same during this adverse situation due to COVID-19 outbreak, the health ministry has issued the following directions: 

1. Reporting of Doctors to allotted Medical/Dental Colleges through NEET PG Counselling, 2020 to be considered as an Essential Service 

2. . . The Participating Colleges/Institutes across the country should be allowed to open and operate for all activities related to preparation and conduction of the Reporting process to be held from 15th June 2020. 

3 Allotment letter issued by MCC of DGHS, MoHFW to be considered as the equivalent of curfew pass/E-pass for movement for the purpose of reporting at the allotted college from 15th June 2020. 

4. . The support staff/ observers of Participating Colleges / Institutes should be permitted to travel for the preparation and conduct of the reporting process from 15th June 2020. 

5. . Local authorities to provide necessary administrative facilitation for the conduction of the reporting process at the allotted college from 15th June 2020. TO VIEW THE OFFICIAL NOTICE, CLICK ON THE LINK GIVEN BELOW https://medicaldialogues.in/pdf_upload/pdf_upload-130355.pdf

Saturday, June 13, 2020

Hyderabad's Gandhi Hospital in utter chaos as COVID-19 bodies pile up at mortuary


Hyderabad's Gandhi Hospital in utter chaos as COVID-19 bodies pile up at mortuary

DECCAN CHRONICLE | VIKRAM SHARMA

PublishedJun 13, 2020, 2:18 pm IST

The hospital administration is struggling to set things in order at the morgue.

Hyderabad: As fear of the killer virus fills the air, dozens of grieving men and women keep arriving outside the morgue at Gandhi hospital throughout the day to identify the bodies of their loved ones who died due to COVID-19.

Some wait endlessly, others plead or argue with the authorities to release the body quickly. The morgue staff, who too are on the edge, make each person stand at a distance and take a quick peek at the body, either through the transparent patch on the body bag or by slightly unzipping it -- all in a flash. None have the time or patience to go through the label on the bag which mentions the name, age, ward (where he died) and other specifics.

As chaos reigns supreme outside the Gandhi hospital mortuary, the hospital administration is struggling to set things in order at the morgue to avoid goof-ups like the one that happened on Thursday when the morgue staff released the body of a COVID-19 victim to a wrong family -- the second such incident in the recent past.

For the moment, the hospital authorities are mulling pasting a color photograph of the deceased on the body bag to help in easy identification, put up more lights around the mortuary and importantly, limit the time for releasing the body in evening, perhaps till 6.30 p.m. So far, bodies were being released at 10 or 11 pm.

Hospital sources told Deccan Chronicle that the ward boys involved with patient care have been reluctant to deal with the bodies at the mortuary after a few of them tested positive for the virus recently. They were the ones dealing it with regularly. Following this, the staff working under the Health Inspector have been requested to take charge of the morgue, as a temporary arrangement.

''Presently, staff from different departments and even security personnel are being made to work at the mortuary. The responsibility of the team dealing with the funeral start only after the body is placed in the ambulance,'' they said.

It takes anywhere between four to five hours to shift the body to the mortuary from the ward. After making an entry about the arrival into the morgue, it is packed one by one using disinfectants and other chemicals to arrest the virus from spreading.

Meanwhile, the bodies keep piling up and the rush at the mortuary increases. There is no time specified for release of the body and this leads to chaos throughout the day. If the venue for cremation of two or more deceased happen to be close to each other, then the bodies are released at the same time, which is convenient for body transporters. But this could lead to more waiting time as both bodies would not be ready at the same time. 

In Thursday's goof-up, wherein one Rashed Ali Khan's body was mistakenly given to another family, none noticed the label on the body bag, right from the time it was released from the mortuary till the cremation. When the family member who wrongly identified the body was questioned, he said that Rashed resembled his relative, who too had died due to COVID-19.

TN replaces its health secy after death toll discrepancy

TN replaces its health secy after death toll discrepancy

13/06/2020

Divya Chandrababu

letters@hindustantimes.com

Chennai : Tamil Nadu on Friday appointed J Radhakrishnan as the new health secretary transferring Dr Beela Rajesh to the commercial taxes and registration department, a day after the state’s data on death toll figures came under the scanner. The move comes at a time when a multi-disciplinary team appointed by the Centre to study the state’s low mortality rate, among other parameters, is expected to submit its report to the health ministry after visiting Tamil Nadu’s seven worst affected districts, including Chennai earlier this month.

Radhakrishnan is the current revenue administration commissioner and was Rajesh’s predecessor. “We are looking at team work, interdepartmental coordination and cooperation from public,” he said after taking charge.

The central team comprising two doctors from Puducherry’s Jawaharlal Institute of Postgraduate Medical Education and Research arrived at the capital city on June 4 and travelled to the worst-hit districts over three days to study the measures undertaken by the state to tackle the spread of the coronavirus pandemic, including testing levels, containment strategies, quarantine facilities, treatment and clinical management.

“Our concern is to prevent and contain the disease. If it spreads, we should not lose lives. In that context Tamil Nadu emerges as the best in the country. This visit will offer us insights which can be emulated in other states,” Rajendra Ratnoo, the team’s nodal officer, said.

Earlier this week, the TN Directorate of Public Health and Preventive Medicine found that the death registry maintained by the Greater Chennai Corporation recorded 236 deaths that were not added to the state’s tally. A nine-member committee was formed to reconcile Covid-19 related deaths for Chennai.

On if a rectification of Covid-19 death numbers would affect the report, Ratnoo said, “We have asked the government to share data with us which we will analyse again after it’s updated.”

As of June 12, Tamil Nadu (40698) had the second highest number of cases in the country after Maharashtra (101,141). While Chennai accounts for 70% of the caseload in the state, other affected districts include Chengalpattu, Kacheepuram, Thiruvallur, Ariyalur, Villupuram and Cuddalore.

However, Tamil Nadu also registers the second highest tests per million among the 10 worst affected states in the country. While the national average is 4024 tests per million (as of June 11), Tamil Nadu conducts 8662 tests per million. The only other state that tests more is Delhi, which had 34687 cases as of Thursday, and averages of 13703 tests per million.

The team is currently analysing the data and will submit the report soon, Ratnoo said.

Don’t believe rumours, we have not decided to reimpose lockdown: CM

Don’t believe rumours, we have not decided to reimpose lockdown: CM

AMID SOCIAL MEDIA BUZZ:

Uddhav Thackeray clarifies, urges citizens to follow lockdown norms to help curb spread

13/06/2020

Health workers screen residents of Motilal Nagar at Goregaon on Friday. Satyabrata Tripathy/HT Photo

HT Correspondent

htmetro@hindustantimes.com

Mumbai : With rumours circulating on social media that the state government was planning to impose lockdown restrictions in the state once again, chief minister Uddhav Thackeray clarified on Friday that no such decision has been taken. While Mission Begin Again has relaxed some restrictions on movement, Thackeray appealed to citizens to follow lockdown norms to help curb the spread of Covid-19.

On Friday, messages started making rounds on social media about the state government in Maharashtra re-imposing the lockdown from next week. In response to these rumours, the chief minister’s office issued a statement on Friday morning, dispelling these speculations.

“There are rumours being spread on social media and reports on some [news] channels that the state government has taken a decision to impose lockdown by shutting down all shops and commercial establishments. We have not taken any such decision. Such reports create confusion among people. Spreading such false news is a violation of the law and should not be transmitted without confirmation,” read the statement.

On Wednesday, Thackeray had said the state may be forced to impose the lockdown again if people did not follow lockdown norms. “The threat of Covid-19 has not passed, it still persists. As we continue to battle pandemic, we cannot put brakes on the wheels of the economy. We were shocked looking at the crowd on the first day. Outdoor physical activities are permitted for your good health and not to spoil it. People will have to keep physical distance. The government is evaluating the situation. If we feel that the lifting of lockdown is life-threatening, then we will be forced to impose the lockdown again,” he had said.

In the statement released on Friday, Thackeray said that relaxation of restrictions should not be taken as leave to ignore distancing norms and other preventive measures. “Lifting of the lockdown norms does not mean people are allowed to step out, leading to crowding at public places and which could prove hazardous for health. Maintaining social distancing, masking the face and sanitisation at regular intervals should be adopted now as part of one’s lifestyle. Everybody should self-discipline for their own health and that of their close ones,” he said.

Man brings live snake to hospital after being bitten

REGION DIGEST

Man brings live snake to hospital after being bitten

A 48-year-old drunk house painter caused a flutter at the casualty ward of the Coimbatore Medical College Hospital on Thursday night by a carrying a live cobra in a bag that bit him while consuming alcohol with his friend. Soundarajan, 48, was bitten by a snake while drinking liquor and smoking marijuana with a friend at Kallimadai, Singanallur. Since it was dark and anticipating that the doctor would ask him about the snake that bit him, Soundarajan caught the snake and put it in a bag. Soundarajan and his friend reached the casualty ward of CMCH immediately.

While narrating the incident to a duty doctor, the reptile slipped out of the bag. Staff members and doctors were shocked when they saw the snake slithering slowly in the ward.

As it was too late in the night to call a snake catcher, the staff members killed the snake.

Rumours trigger a bout of panic buying in a few areas

Rumours trigger a bout of panic buying in a few areas

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Chennai:13.06.2020

Few pockets in the city witnessed panic buying for essential commodities before noon on Friday, after rumours over an impending lockdown spread wild on social media. People rushed to their neighbourhood supermarkets to stock up for the coming week.

A supermarket at Saidapet which had noticed a drop in customers following relaxation of lockdown restrictions, saw a sharp jump in customers on Friday. An anxious customer was seen inquiring with his family members on the phone about products probably left off his shopping list. “There were messages of an impending lockdown in Chennai soon. So I rushed to buy all necessities today (on Friday) itself,” Hari, the customer, said.

The supermarket usually sees 60-70 billings from morning to noon but saw almost double the business on Friday. Similarly, a vegetable shop in Saidapet also had a busy Friday morning.

Meanwhile, owner of a snack outlet at KK Nagar said it saw only a marginal rise in customers. “We had more customers than in the past few days. Must have been because of the rumours about another lockdown”

We had more customers than in the past few days. Must have been because of the rumours about another lockdown

Owner | SNACK SHOP IN KK NAGAR

NIRF ranks Amrita varsity fourth best

NIRF ranks Amrita varsity fourth best

13/06/2020

Amrita Vishwa Vidyapeetham has emerged as the fourth best university in the country in the National Institutional Ranking Framework (NIRF) Ranking 2020. Vellore Institute of Technology and Amrita are the only two private engineering institutes to be ranked in top 20 in the engineering category.

The university was also ranked seventh among medical colleges in India after All India Institute of Medical Sciences, New Delhi, Post Graduate Institute of Medical Education and Research, Chandigarh, Christian Medical College, Vellore, NIMHANS, Bangalore, Sanjay Gandhi Post Graduate Institute of Medical Sciences, Lucknow, and BHU, Varanasi. “Amrita Vishwa Vidyapeetham and its medical college again finding a place in the top 10 in the NIRF Ranking 2020 is testimony to the vision of the institution—goals of education for life and compassion-driven research. The recognition would not have been possible but for the efforts put in by the students and staff,” said Dr P. Venkat Rangan, Vice Chancellor, Amrita Vishwa Vidyapeetham.

Attended by over 20,000 students, Amrita Vishwa Vidyapeetham has collaborations with 500 world-ranked universities. It also has secured research grants of over $100m from governmental and private funding agencies including World Bank, UNESCO, UNDP, Gates Foundation,

New special trains see meagre occupancy

New special trains see meagre occupancy

13/06/2020

Passengers who alighted from Arakkonam - Coimbatore Superfast Intercity Special train at the Coimbatore Railway Station on Friday.

M. Periasamy

The new passenger special trains between Coimbatore and Arakkonam saw meagre occupancy on its inaugural run on Friday.

Train No. 02676 Coimbatore – Arakkonam Intercity Superfast Special train had occupancy of only around 6%, while Train No. 02675 Arakkonam – Coimbatore train saw around 20% occupancy, according to sources in the Salem Division of Southern Railway.

Only around 58 passengers boarded Train No. 02676 at Coimbatore Junction, which left at 3.15 p.m. Train No. 02675, which arrived at Coimbatore Junction from Arakkonam Junction at 2.05 p.m., ferried only around 140 passengers, the sources said.

As the train services were announced only three days ago on June 9, the short period might have caused the low occupancy, sources said, adding that the number of passengers might increase for the daily train service in the coming days.

This is the third passenger special train service from Coimbatore Junction. Operation of Train No. 02083 Coimbatore –Mayiladuturai Jan Shatabdi special train and Train No. 02680 Coimbatore- Katpadi Intercity Superfast Special train began on June 1. The swab samples of all passengers coming to Coimbatore from Arakkonam and Katpadi are being lifted by Health Department staff at Coimbatore Railway Station.

Just one devotee for ‘Corona Devi’ in Kerala ‘temple’

Just one devotee for ‘Corona Devi’ in Kerala ‘temple’

Anilan has installed the idol at a shrine, says worshipping a virus is not alien custom

13/06/2020

Anilan has installed an idol of ‘goddess COVID-19’ at a shrine attached to his home.
While the controversy over the reopening of temples continues to rage, Anilan, a resident of Kadakkal, has installed an idol of ‘goddess COVID-19’ at a shrine attached to his home.

Christened Corona Devi, the deity is a replica of SARS-CoV-2 with its red spiky tentacles, and he calls her “a new addition to the pantheon of 33 crore Hindu gods”.

“I will conduct pujas in front of the goddess for the safety and well-being of all engaged in the battle against the pandemic. There will be no darshan as it is also a protest against the political propaganda behind the reopening of temples. People are now using gods for political gains, but this is not the time for temple visits. Survival is all that matters now,” he says.

Made of thermocol and sitting on a ‘pallival,’ Corona Devi is a goddess without any ‘moolamantra’. “In Kerala, you have a deity for smallpox, another contagious disease, who finds a place in some temples. It is no attempt to mock anyone and all pujas will be done with utmost dedication. According to Hindu mythology, God is omnipresent, and even exists in the virus. Worshipping a virus as devi is not an alien custom for us,” he says.

Though there is no darshan, Corona Devi’s prasadam will be available to devotees via mail.

Mr. Anilan says the shrine is dedicated to corona warriors, including health workers, scientists, and Fire and Rescue Services personnel. “Pujas will be held in the names of all those helping others. Those who want the prasadam can get in touch with me. I will not charge any money for the pujas and offerings,” he says.

Temperature checks at doorstep soon

Temperature checks at doorstep soon

13/06/2020

The Greater Chennai Corporation will start distribution of thermal scanners to civic workers in order to check temperature of residents in the city.

The number of city residents has been estimated to be 87 lakh. At least 150 households would be thermally scanned for fever per day by each civic worker, officials said.

For the past few months, over 12,000 civic workers have been collecting information from residents on fever cases to contain the spread of COVID-19.

A senior official of the Corporation said workers would visit homes, check body temperature and share information with the civic body.

Doctors in mobile units would reach neighbourhoods where a large number of fever cases were reported on a particular day. The information compiled by workers would be used to prioritise stationing of mobile hospital units in various localities.

At a meeting in Ripon Buildings with doctors from other districts on Friday, senior officials of the Corporation directed doctors with PPE kits to visit households for treating home isolated patients who tested positive for COVID-19.

No plan for complete lockdown in parts of Chennai, govt. tells HC

No plan for complete lockdown in parts of Chennai, govt. tells HC

13/06/2020

Vehicles bearing Chennai registration numbers being stopped at the Chengalpattu toll plaza.

S.R. Raghunathan

He said that e-passes were issued only by Collectors of destinations to which residents of Chennai wished to travel.

Those Collectors had to issue e-passes after taking into consideration various circumstances, including the need to quarantine visitors after letting them into their districts, he told the bench.

The AAG said that the intensity of the virus had changed and many asymptomatic people were testing positive for the disease. The government was working hard to contain its spread and the success of those efforts would depend on the cooperation of the people, he said.

Appreciating the efforts taken by the government, Justice Kumar said: “We see that the government is taking good steps. Even Ministers are on the streets, but you will have to be very careful because Chennai is continuing to be a hotspot.”

Meanwhile, advocate V. Vasanthakumar urged the court to take up a case filed by him seeking complete lockdown in the city.

Since the case papers were not before them, the judges posted the matter to Monday, subject to the roster to be decided by Chief Justice Amreshwar Pratap Sahi. The judges clarified that they only wanted to know, in public interest, whether the government had plans to impose a complete lockdown in Chennai.

J. Radhakrishnan replaces Beela Rajesh as Health Secy.

J. Radhakrishnan replaces Beela Rajesh as Health Secy.

He was co-ordinating COVID-19-related work in Chennai

13/06/2020

J. Radhakrishnan shot into prominence for effectively handling tsunami relief and rebuilding works in 2004-05.

Amid the rising number of COVID-19 cases in the State, the Tamil Nadu government on Friday replaced Health Secretary Beela Rajesh, bringing in senior IAS officer J. Radhakrishnan in her place. Ms. Rajesh was posted as Secretary, Commercial Taxes and Registration Department.

Mr. Radhakrishnan is no stranger to the Health Department. Incidentally, he was Ms. Rajesh’s predecessor in the department, serving as Secretary between 2012 and February 2019. He will continue to hold additional charge as Secretary-cum-Commissioner, Revenue Administration.

Managing disaster

He shot into prominence for effectively handling tsunami relief and rebuilding works in coastal Nagapattinam during 2004-05.

Early last month, as Chennai turned a hotspot for COVID-19, the government appointed him as a Special Nodal Officer to co-ordinate COVID-19-related issues with the Commissioner of GCC and other teams formed to tackle the spread of the disease.

The bureaucratic reshuffle came on a day Tamil Nadu’s COVID-19 tally breached the 40,000-mark and against the backdrop of consistently rising cases in Chennai.

The capital city has been registering new cases of COVID-19 in four-figure numbers, on a daily basis, for the past many days.

Sources contended that the government put Mr. Radhakrishnan at the helm so that his experience in disaster management could come in handy to device micro strategies to arrest the spread of COVID-19.

Four Madurai colleges in NIRF’s top 100

Four Madurai colleges in NIRF’s top 100

13/06/2020

Madurai Kamaraj University (MKU) slipped in its National Institute Ranking Framework (NIRF) ranking from 45 in 2019 to 60 in 2020, according to the list released by the Ministry of Human Resource Development on June 11.

This year, Tamil Nadu managed to get 18 universities in the top 100 university list.

MKU managed to come in the 14th position among universities in Tamil Nadu that had applied for the ranking.

The Kalasalingam Academy of Research and Higher Education, Krishnankoil, - a new entrant into the top 100 list, was ranked 15th in the State and 72nd in the country. Gandhigram Rural University in Dindigul came in at the 17th place in TN and 91st nation-wide.

Vice-Chancellor of MKU M. Krishnan said that although the ranking has dropped by 15 places since 2019, the scores that they have procured remain the same. “There has been a huge increase in competition over the last year and several other universities have taken part in the ranking this year,” he said.

He added that the university had not been able to make progress in ensuring more diversity among the students and increasing the number of collaborations with industries nearby for furthering research and hands-on training.

Other colleges in Madurai which found a place in the top 100 rankings included Thiagarajar College of Engineering was at 64 among engineering colleges; Thiagarajar College, Teppakulam (22), Lady Doak College (52) and Fatima College (74) found a place among arts and science colleges; and Thiagarajar College of Engineering was ranked 17 for architecture.

Visa curbs eased in more categories

Visa curbs eased in more categories

13/06/2020

The Ministry of Home Affairs on Friday exempted additional categories of foreigners from the existing visa restrictions, allowing them to travel to India.

The fresh categories include “foreign national who are minor children where at least one of their parents is an Indian citizen or OCI card holder; foreign national married to Indian citizens; foreign nationals who are single parents of minor children holding Indian passports or OCI cards; students who are foreign nationals where at least one of their parents is an Indian citizen or OCI card holder; and dependent family member of foreign diplomats/ official service passport holding service staff accredited to foreign diplomatic missions, counselor offices of accredited international organizations in India.”

The foreigners will have to seek fresh visas.

On May 22, MHA had allowed a limited category of Overseas Citizen of India (OCI) cardholders, stranded abroad, to come to India.

The life-long visa to OCIs was temporarily suspended in March in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic.

SC raps govt. on pay cuts for medical staff

SC raps govt. on pay cuts for medical staff

You don’t want dissatisfied soldiers in the war against COVID-19, court says, urging Centre to do more

13/06/2020

Battle front: Healthcare workers checking temperature in this file photo. Vijay BateVijayBate

The Supreme Court on Friday took strong exception to salary cuts for government and private medical staff and lack of infrastructure, warning the government that “you do not want dissatisfied soldiers in the war” against the COVID-19 pandemic.

“You need to do more for them... Concerns of citizens will be addressed if their [doctors and medical workers] grievances are addressed,” Justice S.K. Kaul, on a three-judge Bench led by Justice Ashok Bhushan, told Solicitor General Tushar Mehta.

Senior advocate K.V. Vishwanathan, appearing for Dr. Arushi Jain, said doctors in both government and private hospitals were on the front line and should be spared salary cuts. They put their lives on the line, often facing threats not only from the rampaging virus but also mobs.

“What is this? Doctors not being paid. You [government] need to do more. This should not require the court’s intervention”, Justice Kaul said.

SOP questioned

Dr. Jain has questioned the Centre’s Standard Operating Procedure of May 15 for front line COVID-19 Health Care Workers (HCWs) by which it ended the 14-day mandatory quarantine for them.

Mr. Vishwanathan, speaking for his client, said separate accommodation facilities should be made available for doctors. By going home, they exposed their families to greater risk. “Here the panacea is worse than the disease”, he submitted.

The Bench, also comprising Justice M.R. Shah, reacted that doctors should be given an opportunity to address their grievances and suggestions before a relevant body. Their opinions should be taken into consideration before protocols were announced. Their plea for accommodation should be looked into.

The court listed the case for next week.

In the previous hearing, the government told the court that hospitals were responsible for implementing the Infection Prevention and Control (IPC) activities. The final responsibility lay with the health care workers to protect themselves.

The Ministry of Health and Family Welfare told the top court that it was the responsibility of health care workers to adequately train themselves and take possible measures to prevent infection.

Onus of safety on HCWs

The government had said while the Hospital Infection Control Committee (HICC) in the health facility was responsible for implementing the Infection Prevention and Control (IPC) activities and for organising regular training on IPC for HCWs, the final responsibility lay with the HCWs to protect themselves.

It said the current pandemic was unprecedented. There was no time-tested and universally acceptable protocol pertaining to COVID-19 preparedness.

Govt. committed to quota, says Nadda

Govt. committed to quota, says Nadda

Paswan says it’s a constitutional right

13/06/2020

J.P. Nadda

A day after the Supreme Court said reservation is not a fundamental right, BJP president J.P. Nadda clarified on Friday that his party and the Narendra Modi government were committed to it.

Lok Janshakti Party (LJP) leader and Union Minister Ram Vilas Paswan demanded that all political parties come together and put all laws related to reservation in the Ninth Schedule of the Constitution so as to prevent any legal challenge to them.

In a statement, Mr. Nadda said some people were trying to create confusion. “The government under Narendra Modi and the BJP are committed to reservation. Our commitment to social justice is unbreakable. We stand committed to reservation. The Prime Minister has repeated it again and again. Our endeavour is always towards social harmony and equal opportunity for everyone,” he said.

‘Constitutional right’

Mr. Paswan said reservation in government jobs and education for the Scheduled Castes and the Scheduled Tribes, Other Backward Classes and the economically backward members of the general castes might not be a fundamental right, but it is very much a constitutional right.

He expressed disappointment that some controversy was often raised over the issue, though the reservation for the Scheduled Castes and the Scheduled Tribes owed its genesis to the Poona Pact between Mahatma Gandhi and B. R. Ambedkar.

“The LJP appeals to all political parties, who have joined hands over the issue earlier as well, that they come together to put all laws regarding reservation in the Ninth Schedule of the Constitution to lay all controversies to rest,” he said in a statement.

The Supreme Court refused to entertain petitions of various political parties challenging the Centre’s decision not to grant 50% reservation to OBCs as per the Tamil Nadu law in the medical seats surrendered by the State in the all India quota for undergraduate, postgraduate and dental courses in 2020-21. It asked the DMK, the AIADMK, the CPI(M), the MDMK, the PMK, the Congress and the CPI to approach the Madras High Court with their pleas.

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