Friday, December 10, 2021

Singapore taken off list of ‘at risk’ nations

Singapore taken off list of ‘at risk’ nations

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

10.12.2021

India has removed Singapore from the list of Omicron at risk countries, thereby removing the requirement of everyone arriving from there being tested on arrival.

The move comes as a big relief due to pent up travel demand between the two countries with Singapore having a significant population of Indian diaspora.

Unlike several countries such as Germany, France, UK, US, Canada and UAE that have had an air bubble with India during the pandemic allowing eligible categories of people to travel, Singapore and India created a vaccinated travel lane from November 29, 2021. The arrangement has started with six daily flights from Chennai, Delhi and Mumbai and Singapore’s Changi Airport.






Bizman duped of ₹1L by man posing as customer care executive of courier firm


Bizman duped of ₹1L by man posing as customer care executive of courier firm

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Bhopal:  10.12.2021

A 35-year-old storekeeper was allegedly duped by unidentified accused posing as the customer care operator of a courier company. The storekeeper was looking for the customer care number of the courier company to track a package dispatched from Surat. He got a fake number online, and the fraudster sent him a link to transfer Rs 3. When the victim clicked on t he link and entered his bank details, the accused hacked his smartphone using a remote access application and siphoned of Rs 1.02 lakh from his two bank accounts in five minutes.

The victim approached the cyber-crime branch and filed a complaint. The cybercrime branch registered a Zero FIR and transferred the case diary to Kolar police station where a case was registered against unidentified accused on Wednesday.

Complainant Mukesh Sen, 35, a resident of Damkheda A-Sector in Kolar, works as a storekeeper in a lift company for the past 12 years. He told police that on November 30, he was waiting for a parcel sent from Surat through a courier service. The delivery was delayed so he searched for the courier agency customer care number to track the parcel.

Sanskrit univ of Devprayag to be named after Gen

Sanskrit univ of Devprayag to be named after Gen

Dehradun:  10.12.2021

On the first day of the winter session of the Uttarakhand assembly, Devprayag MLA Vinod Kandari moved a proposal to name the underconstruction Sanskrit University at Devprayag after CDS General Bipin Rawat, which was approved by the House, reports Kautilya Singh.

Haridwar MLA and state BJP chief Madan Kaushik also tabled a proposal to name the Sainya Dham, being built in Dehradun in memory of those who died in the line of duty, after Rawat.

Culling of birds starts in Alappuzha

Culling of birds starts in Alappuzha

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Kottayam:  10.12.2021

After bird flu was confirmed in the Kuttanad region of Kerala’s Alappuzha district, thousands of poultry were culled on Thursday evening. In Purakkad, where the mass death of ducks were confirmed due to bird flu, the remaining ducks and poultry in a one-kilometre radius were culled.

The district administration has banned sale of eggs, meat and faeces (manure) of the poultry. The order issued by the district collector will be enforced in Champakkulam, Nedumudy, Muttar, Veeyapuram, Karuvatta, Thrikkunnappuzha, Thakazhi, Purakkad, Ambalapuzha Thekku, Ambalapuzha Vadakku and Edathua panchayats and Haripad municipal region.

Boy back in class after letter to PMO


BANISHED OVER FEE

Boy back in class after letter to PMO

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Madikeri:  10.12.2021

A school in Kodagu has reportedly allowed a class 5 boy back into the classroom after allegedly banishing him to the library because his family had not cleared the full fees.

The boy Muthanna’s father has claimed that his son was allowed back into the classroom only after he wrote to the Prime Minister’s Office’s grievance redress system. Muthanna, 10, is in Coorg Public School in Gonikoppal town, Kodagu district. The boy has been studying here from class I.

The school and Muthanna’s father Navada Belliappa have different versions about the fees. When TOI asked the school for its reaction, it got an email. The school wrote Belliappa had “not paid school fee since 2020”. The school also said he had not replied to “our request to pay the fees”. “Bad propaganda is being spread through social media against the institution,” the school said.

Belliappa, a businessman, has a different story to tell. He wrote to the PMO grievance redress department that his son was barred from entering his class from November 30, 2021, for not paying his full fees. He claimed he had paid Rs 40,000 in 2020-21 and Rs 60,000 in 2021-22.

He wrote that a member of the school staff had “abused” his son and told him he was being made to sit in the library because he hadn’t paid his full fees. On the other hand, Belliappa, said the school had not communicated anything to him, despite his repeated queries. “My son is crying most of the time,” he wrote, seeking action from the PMO on December 1.

Belliappa told TOI he had paid Rs 60,000 for 2021-22, following the previous year’s fee structure but the school management had asked for Rs 1,10,000 as this was the new higher fee. “They increased the fee too much in the middle of this Covid crisis. I sent my objections by email on the high amount which is not possible to pay. They didn’t respond to my appeal. Instead, they sent my son outside the class and restricted him to the library room. They demanded the full payment of fees to allow him to attend classes,” Belliappa said. The father said he then wrote to the PMO.

SC: Cannot file consumer plaint against govt docs

SC: Cannot file consumer plaint against govt docs

New Delhi: 

The Supreme Court has said that a person cannot file a consumer complaint against a doctor after getting free of cost treatment from a government hospital.

In terms of Section 2(1)(d)  (ii) of the Act, a consumer is the one who hires or avails of any services for a ‘consideration’ which has been paid or promised or partly paid or partly promised. Under this definition a person cannot be termed as consumer and file complaint against governemnt hospital. Now the SC has clarified that a complaint cannot be filed against goverement doctors also.

“...a medical officer who is employed in a hospital renders service on behalf of the hospital administration and if the service as rendered by the Hospital does not fall within the ambit of 2(1)(0) of the Act being free of charge, the same service cannot be treated as service under Section 2(1)(0) for the reasons that it has been rendered by medical officer in the hospital who receives salary for the employment in the hospital. It was thus concluded that the services rendered by employeemedical officer to such a person would therefore continue to be service rendered free of charge,” the SC said. TNN

Int’l fliers question RT-PCR charges, new 2% testing rule


Int’l fliers question RT-PCR charges, new 2% testing rule

Mehul.Jani@timesgroup.com

Surat:10,12,2021

Despite well-defined SOP issued by the government, the passengers, arriving from countries not in the ‘at risk’ list, who are randomly selected to undergo Covid-19 test are giving a tough time to airport officials.

Apart from “Why only me?” and “Why should I pay for the test?”, the airport officials have got used to international passengers complaining about the long wait they have to endure to get the RT-PCR test results.

Similar scenes were played at the Surat international airport after landing of the Sharjah-Surat in the wee hours of Thursday. Teams of airport staff, airline staff, Surat Municipal Corporation’s health team and laboratory staff were ready to screen the 164 passengers of the flight that landed at around 12.15am. Things were going on smoothly till the airline staff announced the names to 2% passengers, six in case of this flight, who were selected to undergo RT-PCR tests. It was not long before the six passengers — two German passport holders, one woman holding an Australian passport and three Indian citizens — started complaining.

The passengers questioned the logic behind testing just a few passengers. “If the government genuinely wants to check the spread of the new variant, they must check all the passengers, not just 2%,” a passenger said. Another passenger complained about being made to pay for the tests. “The government or the airline should pay for the test,” he reasoned.

The woman with an Australian passport said that she is not from an ‘at risk’ country still she is put through testing. “My kids are suffering as along with me they too have to wait at the airport till the RT-PCR test results arrive,” she said.

As per SOP, travellers are required to pay Rs 2,700 for rapid RT-PCR test, the result of which takes roughly one hour. Passengers can also opt for a regular RT-PCR test that costs Rs 400 but the result of which takes around six hours.

When TOI contacted airport officials for their comments, they said, “We have already discounted our 13% royalty. Many passengers protested about the 2% rule and the RT-PCR charges, but they must understand that we are just implementing the SOPs issued by the government.”

Students prepare to fly as Oz opens borders


Students prepare to fly as Oz opens borders

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Ahmedabad:10,12,2021

Akash Mistry decided to pursue a master’s degree programme from Australia after completing his degree engineering in civil and infrastructure from Adani Institute of Infrastructure Engineering. He got admission to the University of Adelaide in July 2020 but could not be on campus as the country closed its borders due to Covid pandemic. After waiting for over 17 months during which he began online studies by opting for two subjects per semester, Mistry is now ready to fly and start on-campus education.

“Earlier, the Australian government said that the borders will reopen from December 1, but due to omicron variant, the plan has been revisited. As per the latest government guidelines, the border will now reopen from December 15,” said Mistry.

Thousands of students in the city, hoping to study in Australia, are working on their travel plans.

From December 15, fully vaccinated international students can travel to participating states and territories in Australia, quarantinefree without needing to apply for a travel exemption, according to the official website of Department of Home Affairs, Australian government.

Bhavin Thakker, a visa consultant, said that there are about 22,000 students from India who are expected to travel to Australia this year. Ritesh Desai, also a visa consultant from the city, said students from India have started looking to other overseas options like the US, Canada and the UK after Australia closed its borders for such a long time.

The ticket prices from Ahmedabad to Australia have soared from about Rs 50,00 per ticket to Rs 1.25 lakh following the announcement to reopen borders from December 15, he further said.

Harsh Prajapati, who took admission at Southern Cross University, in June 2020 has attended three semesters online. He is now ready to fly on December 19, and fulfill his dreams to study on campus in Australia.

Omicron concerns: Threefold rise in mask sales


Omicron concerns: Threefold rise in mask sales

10L Disposable Masks Being Sold Every Day

Niyati.Parikh@timesgroup.com

Ahmedabad: 10.12,2021

As the new cases of Covid-19 begin showing a steady rise along with the added concern of the new Omicron variant, people have surely pulled their guards up. Clearly, the sale of masks as well as immunity boosters has increased threefolds in the past one week, according to estimates by Federation of Gujarat State Chemists and Druggists’ Association (FGSCDA).

In the past week, an estimated 10 lakh disposable masks and 3 lakh N95 masks were sold across Gujarat on a daily basis, suggest FGSCDA estimates. Gujarat is home to at least 24,000 chemists and pharmacies.

Alpesh Patel, chairman, FGSCDA, said, “With a steady rise in cases, people have their guards up. Especially with fewer restrictions on gatherings and public movements in place, people are exercising caution and are becoming increasingly careful and are choosing to wear masks at offices and other public places. As a consequence, the sales have gone up.” Gujarat reported some 70 fresh cases of Covid-19 on Friday till 5pm, according to data provided by the state government.

Even the demand for sanitisers has gone up by at least 50%, according to estimates by chemists. “In November, the sales of both masks as well as sanitisers had drastically dropped with barely any demand. However, over the past week to 10 days, the demand has once again begun picking up. People come asking for N95 masks as well as sanitisers,” said Ankur Aggarwal, co-founder, Medkart.

The sale of immunity boosters is also seeing a marginal increase. “So far, there is no exceptional demand for Covid-related medicines. However, some customers who had stopped purchasing immunity boosters such as vitamin C have once again begun placing orders for these medicines, ” said an Ahmedabad-based chemis.

Pay for juvenile diabetes treatment: Court


Pay for juvenile diabetes treatment: Court

INSURERS COULD NOT ESTABLISH THAT CHILD’S TYPE-1 DIABETES IS GENETIC DISORDER

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Ahmedabad: 10.12.2021

A consumer court has ordered an insurance companies to reimburse the expenditure on treatment of juvenile diabetes with observation that the insurers could not establish that the child’s type-1 diabetes falls under the category of genetic disorder.

According to case details, Viramgam-resident Anilkumar Chavda’s 10-year-old son suffers from type-1 diabetes and was hospitalized in 2017.

Chavda had obtained a Happy Family Floater Policy with Silver Plan from the Oriental Insurance Co Ltd and M D India Health Care Services Pvt Ltd.

He sought reimbursement for treatment, Rs 48,882, which the insurers declined on the ground that the patient was treated for a disease which is a genetic disorder and according to the Mediclaim policy clause 4.15, such claim is not payable.

Chavda sued the insurers through Mukesh Parikh of Grahak Suraksha and Action Committee with the Consumer Dispute Redressal Commission, Ahmedabad (City), where the insurance companies submitted that the claim papers were scrutinised and investigated by TPA and it found that the treatment for the child was genetic in origin and therefore not payable.

After hearing the case, the commission said that the child was hospitalised for type-1 diabetes treatment, but there was nothing in medical papers to indicate that the ailment falls under the category of genetic disorder, nor was there a remotest whisper in any of the papers produced by the insurers.

The commission cited a 2018 circular issued by the Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority of India (IRDAI) and how the circular was put in abeyance after the orders of the Supreme Court and Delhi high court with regard to rejection of Mediclaim related to treatment of genetic disorder. Since the insurers in this case could not adduce any rebuttal evidence to establish that type-1 diabetes is a genetic disorder, “we hold that the opponents (insurers) have wrongly rejected the claim and which is a pointer to the deficiency in service and unfair trade practice”.

The commission ordered the insurers to pay Rs 43,938 with 7% interest since the date of filing of complaint. It deducted 10% of the claim according to the policy only. Besides, the insurers have been told to pay Rs 5,000 to Chavda as compensation towards mental harassment and legal expenditure.

REGION DIGEST


REGION DIGEST

10.12.2021

YouTuber held for tweet against govt

YouTuber Maridhas, who posted a controversial tweet about the DMK government, was arrested by the cyber crime wing attached to the Madurai city police on Thursday. A team of police officials went to arrest Maridhas at his house situated in Surya Nagar. However, BJP cadres including former MLA and Madurai district president of BJP Dr P Saravanan also went there and picked up an argument with the police officials against his arrest. They questioned the police officials for the reasons for the arrest and raised slogans against the police and the government. But, police managed to arrest Maridhas and took him to the nearby K Pudur police station.

Decomposed body found in house: The decomposed body of a 50-year-old man was found at his house in Keezhadevadhanam in Trichy on Wednesday. The deceased was identified as A Selvakumar, 50 at Keezha Devadhanam. Neighbours noticed his body after a stench emanated from the house that had been locked from December 6. Locals informed his wife S Sujatha, 40, who was residing in Keeranur in Pudukkottai district. The cause of death was yet to the ascertained by the Fort police station.

Elephant tramples man to death: A wild elephant trampled a 70-year-old man to death at Anaikatti on Thursday morning. According to police, the man, identified as K Karai of Arnadukadu village near the Anaikatti forest, had gone to the forest to attend nature’s call. Police recovered the body and sent it for postmortem. The Thadagam police are investigating the incident.

TNSTC driver dies of heart attack: A 45-year-old bus driver parked the bus he was driving with more than 40 passengers safely on the roadside moments before he died of a cardiac arrest on Thursday morning. M Arumugam, attached to the Madurai mofussil bus depot, has been a driver with the Tamil Nadu State Transport Corporation (TNSTC) for 13 years. He was driving on the Madurai-Kodaikanal route and left the Arapalayam bus stand in the city at 6.20am.

Narikurava family thrown out of bus, staff suspended


SWIFT ACTION

Narikurava family thrown out of bus, staff suspended

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Kanyakumari:12.10.2021

Tamil Nadu State Transport Corporation (TNSTC) has placed under suspension the driver and conductor of a government bus on charges of forcing a narikurava family to get down from it at Nagercoil on Thursday evening. This was after a video of a visually-impaired old man, a woman and a child being ejected out of the bus and their luggage bundles thrown out by the conductor was circulated on social media. The child was seen inconsolably crying in distress.

TNSTC Nagercoil division general manager held an inquiry and initiated action against both the employees. A statement from the manager said the bus (TN 74 N 1802) attached to Thiruvattar branch was running on route number 565 from Nagercoil to Tirunelveli with C Nelson as driver and C S Jayadas conductor. As the bus was leaving Vadasery bus stand, the family was forced to get down from the bus. Information technology minister T Mano Thangaraj tweeted that action has been taken against the driver and conductor after he took up the issue with top TNSTC officials.

This is the second such incident of TNSTC crew forcing people belonging to certain classes of the society to get down from buses this week in the district. Both the incidents were caught on video and shared on social media, resulting in suspension of the crew. In the previous incident, a woman selling fish was forced to get down from the bus. A senior TNSTC official also apologised to the woman in person.

Madras School of Economics’ 1st BA course in 2022-23


Madras School of Economics’ 1st BA course in 2022-23

35% Of Seats Reserved For TN Students

Ragu.Raman@timesgroup.com

Chennai:10.12.2021

The Madras School of Economics (MSE) is opening its doors to Class XII passouts looking to pursue an undergraduate degree in economics. It plans to unveil its first BA in economics programme in 2022-23 with 50 seats. It will also reserve 35% of seats for students from Tamil Nadu.

The school, which ranks second after Delhi School of Economics, boasts of nearly 100% placement for its postgraduate degree programmes with average salary of ₹12 lakh per annum.

“Our degree programme will have a strong quantitative component. So, students with maths background in higher secondary will be preferred. We are planning to create awareness about this degree programme among city school students,” said K R Shanmugam, director, Madras School of Economics.

Tamil Nadu students can also compete for the remaining 65% of seats.

Students wishing to join this degree programme may have to write an entrance test in June next year. The institute also plans to allow UG students to study on for five years for an integrated degree.

“Students who complete this BA programme will find it easy to pursue a masters or PhD in foreign universities as the institute is following a similar approach. The syllabus, various options for the students and details of entrance test will be finalised at the academic council meeting in February,” Shanmugam added.

MSE will award its own degree for UG, PG and PhD students. The state recognised MSE as an institute of special importance in economics and allied subjects and management with degree granting power through Madras School of Economics Act, 2020. So far, the institute offered these programmes jointly with Central University of Tamil Nadu (CUTN) in Tiruvarur.

Students wishing to join BA (economics) course may have to take an entrance test in June 2022

Centre gives same old reply to query on 2nd city airport


Centre gives same old reply to query on 2nd city airport

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Chennai:10.12.2021

The ministry of civil aviation continued to present more or less the same old answer regarding the proposed second airport for Chennai in Parliament without any actual updated on the status of the project.

Though the erstwhile AIADMK government identified new locations for the second airport, the ministry in July 2021 replied that two sites were identified.

The reply presented on December 6, in response to DMK Rajya Sabha MP P Wilson, says that four sites are identified.

No reply talks about the Union government including the Sriperumbudur site in the National Infrastructure Pipeline.

“The state government of Tamil Nadu has identified four potential sites for development of a second airport in Chennai and has requested AAI to inspect these sites and prepare the feasibility study report,” the reply presented on December 6 said.

However, AAI has conducted preliminary study for these sites and also completed feasibility report for the site at Sriperumbudur.

The response presented in Parliament does not mention if the current DMK government has given approval for any of these locations for a new airport.

In an answer presented in Parliament in July 2021, the ministry of civil aviation said, “State government in November 2019 identified two locations of Mamandur and Parandur. However, they are yet to finalize the site for setting up of the second airport near Chennai.”

Wilson said repeating the same set of answers shows that the ministry is not interested in developing a new airport in Chennai.

The AIADMK government did not show interest in building an airport in Sriperumbudur and new locations were identified after a delay of nine years. But it was at the end of the term.


In July, the civil aviation ministry said two sites were identified. On December 6, it responded to DMK Rajya Sabha member P Wilson saying four sites were identified

Four city zones have over 100 active cases


TWO ZONES HAVE FEWER THAN 10

Four city zones have over 100 active cases

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Chennai:10.12.2021

Four of Greater Chennai Corporation’s 15 zones had more than 100 active Covid-19 cases as of Thursday. At present, the city has 1,265 active cases with 125 new cases recorded on Thursday.

Kodambakkam tops the list with 172 active cases, followed by Teynampet with 168, Adyar with 146 and Anna Nagar with 119.

Official data shows Teynampet has two streets with more than six active cases. Abhiramapuram First Street in Mylapore has eight cases and Luz Church Road in Mylapore has 10.

“In Abhiramipuram, of the five adults who tested positive, four have been vaccinated, except for a 60-yearold woman. We are carrying out an intense vaccination drive in the whole locality,” said an official. All residents of Luz Church Road have been vaccinated. Instructions have been given to ensure 100% vaccination in these zones, officials said.

Meanwhile, two zones in Chennai have fewer than 10 active cases. Thiruvottriyur zone has nine cases and Manali has five.

Officials urged residents to take part in the mega-vaccination camp taking place on December 11 across 200 wards. “The camp is to be held from 9am to 4pm, and we have a target to vaccinate 4 lakh people during the day,” an official said.

City docs race against time to get organs for 3 patients


City docs race against time to get organs for 3 patients

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Chennai:10,12,2021

Three patients at MGM Healthcare got a new lease of life after organs from deceased donors were airlifted from Chandigarh and Visakhapatnam for two heart transplants and one lung transplant simultaneously in three operating rooms. All three patients , one of whom is a child, are recovering normally.

It was a race against time as teams coordinated the transport of the organs through Green Corridors in the three cities. A team of more than 60 people lead by the chief surgeon Dr K R Balakrishnan, head of anesthesia Dr Suresh Rao and chief cardiologist Dr Ravikumar were involved in this process. The entire process, right from harvesting and transporting of the organs and successfully transplanting themtook 14 hours.

“Travelling from Chandigarh to Chennai without a direct air connectivity is not an easy task. The team reached Chennai after travelling over 7 hours,” said Dr K R Balakrishnan adding that the cold ischemic time, which is the time between removal of the heart from the donor and implanting it in the recipient was 8 hours. In a release, the hospital said the recipient was very sick in the intensive care awaiting a donor organ for a long time and that the new heart is functioning normally. The organ fromVisakhapatnam was transported using an air ambulance.

10 test +ve on Alagappa Tech campus


10 test +ve on Alagappa Tech campus

Corpn To Meet Edu Institutes Today On Covid

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Chennai:10.12.2021

A cluster of about 10 cases so far has been detected on Anna University’s Alagappa College of Technology campus. A day after one student from tested positive for Covid-19, Greater Chennai Corporation officials organised a camp to test all other students on campus.

“So far, tests have been conducted for 300 students. Of this, nine students tested positive for the viral infection,” health minister Ma Subramanian said on Thursday.

Officials said they would test all 763 students on campus, teachers and other staff. “We do saturation testing on campus. Samples of positive patients are sent to the whole genome sequencing lab,” Subramaniam said after visiting the campus with senior health and civic officials.

The 10 students who tested positive are asymptomatic and are in quarantine at the government Covid centre on King’s Institute campus.

The varsity has suspended physical classes for students of Alagappa College of Technology. Hostel students have been quarantined in their hostel rooms. “Online classes will continue for the next two weeks. Physical classes will resume only after confirmation that there are no new cases among hostel students,” a university official said. Other campuses like College of Engineering, Guindy, continued regular in-person classes on Thursday.

The corporation along with the health and revenue departments has called for a meeting on Friday with educational institutions to discuss following Covid protocols.

Health secretary J Radhakrishnan said there won’t be any knee jerk reaction following the Covid cluster.

The university was told to allow students in batches to hostel messes to maintain social distancing. In most clusters detected in educational institutions, health workers found high transmission among students who met at canteens for lunch or tea. “Students don’t wear a mask in the canteen, sit close to each other and chat. This increases transmission rate,” the health minister said. The department will conduct a high-level meeting with school and higher education departments on guidelines to be followed in hostel messes, he added.



GUARD UP: Health officials test students at Anna University hostel. Officials said all students, teachers and staff on campus will be tested

Lab issued corpn notice for bungled Covid data record

Lab issued corpn notice for bungled Covid data record

It Delayed Informing Civic Body Of Test Result

Omjasvin.MD@timesgroup.com

Chennai:10,12,2021

The Greater Chennai Corporation has issued a notice to a private lab in Mannadi for improper recording of information about those undergoing Covid tests, which made tracing a Covid positive couple a tough task.

Officials said the lab had also informed the couple first about their test results and delayed informing the corporation.

City health officer Dr M Jagadeesan issued the notice to KHM labs in Mannadi, (zone 5 - Royapuram) seeking a response. The couple was about to fly to Dubai and wanted a Covid-19 negative certificate, officials said. Officials sources told TOI that the husband (42) and wife (38) from Kalmandapam in north Chennai had given samples for Covid-19 tests in the lab on December 4. “The couple had tested positive on December 5 but the private lab did not tell the corporation about their results but informed the couple instantly,” official sources said.

As a result, the couple absconded and did not quarantine or hospitalize themselves. “When informed on Monday, we verified the register of the private lab only to find that the address only had the name of locality but no door number,” officials added.

After locating the right house following searches, officials found the couple hiding inside. “We have admitted them to a private hospital,” officials added.

Shamsuddin of KHM labs, said it was the fault of the data-entry operator. MD of the lab Harris Farvez said they had informed the patients about their positive status on sympathetic grounds as they had a flight ticket to cancel.

How can A’bad civic body decide what we should eat outside: HC


How can A’bad civic body decide what we should eat outside: HC

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Ahmedabad: 10.12.2021

The Gujarat high court took the Ahmedabad Municipal Corporation (AMC) to task on Thursday for its recent drive against street carts selling non-vegetarian food, questioning how citizens could be stopped from “eating what they want” just because “somebody in power thinks this is what they want you to do”.

“You don’t like non-vegetarian food? That is your outlook. How can you (AMC) decide what we should eat outside?” Justice Biren Vaishnav asked the municipal counsel. “Tomorrow, you will decide what I should eat outside?”

The judge said the AMC must not act on the whims of elected representatives. “Around the Vastrapur lake, hawkers are selling eggs and omelettes. Overnight, you will pick them up and send them away because the party in power says that they don’t want people to eat eggs? Ask your commissioner to remain present (in court) and answer (the question). How dare you indiscriminately pick up people like this and seize their assets?” he said.

“Don’t undertake a drive to satisfy the ego of some people...Tomorrow they will tell me not to take sugarcane juice because it causes diabetes, or that coffee is bad for health.”

Justice Vaishnav was responding to a petition filed by a group of street vendors against the civic body’s campaign last month to stop them from selling non-vegetarian food. Terming the drive tantamount to “bigotry”, the vendors demanded that their carts and stalls be returned to allow them to resume business. They said the municipal authorities had declared the carts wouldn’t be returned before 45 days.

DRIVE AGAINST NON-VEG: The AMC claimed there was no discrimination and their action was an anti-encroachment drive

Initials in Tamil mandatory for students, public


Initials in Tamil mandatory for students, public

10/12/2021

Special CorrespondentCHENNAI

The Tamil Nadu government has issued an order making it mandatory for students to write the initials of their names in Tamil while applying for certificates in schools and colleges. Likewise, the mandate would apply to members of the public when they submit applications for government records.

The order issued by Mahesh Kasirajan, Secretary, Tamil Development Department, directed all departments, schools and colleges to display the Government Order to create awareness among the people. The first letter of the parent’s name as written in Tamil would be the initial of the applicant.

The order follows an announcement made by Tamil Development Minister Thangam Thennarasu in the Assembly while presenting the demand for grants for the department.

The State government already made it compulsory for its employees to sign their name and initials in Tamil.

International flights to resume only after Jan. 31


International flights to resume only after Jan. 31

Singapore taken off ‘at-risk’ nations’ list

10/12/2021

Special Correspondent NEW DELHI

Full resumption of international flights stands postponed at least till January 31, 2022, according to an announcement by the Directorate General of Civil Aviation on Thursday.

Last week, days after announcing resumption of international flights from December 15, the Government postponed its decision indefinitely due to fresh concerns over the new COVID-19 variant, Omicron. An order from the DGCA on December 1 said that a new date would be announced in “due course of time”.

On Thursday, the DGCA said, “the competent authority has decided to extend suspension of scheduled commercial international passenger services to/ from India till 2359 hours IST of 31st January, 2022”. It added that international flights under the air-bubble agreement with 32 countries would continue as before.

In a relief for travellers from Singapore, they will no longer be subjected to mandatory on-arrival RT-PCR test and seven-day quarantine, after the government removed the island city-state from its list of “at-risk” countries.

Singapore had announced that it was restarting flight connectivity with India from November 29, after a gap of 20 months, and fully vaccinated Indian passengers could avail quarantine-free entry under its “Vaccinated Travel Lane” scheme. But later that month, India put Singapore on the list of at-risk countries requiring passengers arriving into the country to undergo additional health safety protocols.

Submit life certificate’


Submit life certificate’

10/12/2021

Staff Reporter  BENGALURU

Bangalore University has urged pensioners/family of pensioners to submit life certificates to the Finance Officer, duly attested by the managers of respective bank branches or by officers of the university, by post. The certificate can also be submitted in person to the pension section of the university by December 31, a release stated.

‘322 people from abroad untraceable in Bihar’


‘322 people from abroad untraceable in Bihar’

10/12/2021

Even as Bihar is on high alert for the Omicron variant, it turns out that 322 of the 1,720 people who arrived in the State from abroad have switched off their phones. Samples of only 305 have been collected. “We managed to speak to only 429 people,” a senior Health Department official told The Hindu. “Of the 305 samples, 255 tested negative. Reports of the others are still awaited.” He said the remaining people could not be traced. Officials appealed to people coming from abroad to get tested.

Serum Institute let us down, says Africa CDC


Serum Institute let us down, says Africa CDC

‘Vaccine maker ended talks abruptly’

10/12/2021

John Nkengasong

ReutersNAIROBI

The Serum Institute of India, the world’s biggest vaccine maker, let Africa down by pulling out of talks to supply COVID-19 vaccines, creating distrust that has affected demand, the head of the Africa Centres for Disease Control said on Thursday.

John Nkengasong denounced recent comments from Serum that uptake of its COVID-19 shots had slowed because of low demand from Africa and vaccine hesitancy, saying the real problem was that Serum had acted unprofessionally.

Serum did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment.

Mr. Nkengasong said Serum had engaged in discussions last year with the Africa Vaccine Acquisition Task Team (AVATT), and that at one point he had believed a deal was very close, but then Serum abruptly ended the talks.

TN to have highest no. of med colleges


TN to have highest no. of med colleges

69 Campuses To Offer More Than 10K Seats

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Chennai:10.12.2021

With 17 new medical colleges – government, private and deemed universities – Tamil Nadu will add 2,350 MBBS seats to the seat matrix during the admission in 2021. With this, the state will have 69 medical colleges offering 10,375 MBBS seats – the highest in the country, according to the National Medical Council website.

The state has 37 government colleges offering 5,125 seats, which are attached to government hospitals. “We have got permission for all the 11 new colleges we had applied for with this we will be able to add 1,450 MBBS seats this year. This is the biggest addition to the seat matrix we have made in one year. We also have permission to add 50 more seats to the existing government Coimbatore medical college,” said director of medical education Dr R Narayanababu.

In 2021, nearly 12% of government medical seats in India are from the state. This also means the state will offer the highest number of seats under the 15% all India quota, he said. Every year 15% of undergraduate seats from the government medical colleges across the country are given to the medical counselling committee under the directorate general of health services for online admissions. Admission to the remaining 85% of the seats are done by the state based on merit in NEET and rules of reservation.

Four new self-financing medical colleges – Arunai Medical College And Hospital in Tiruvannamalai, Swamy Vivekanandha Medical College Hospital And Research Institute in Namakkal, Faculty of Medicine, Sri Lalithambigai Medical College and Hospital in Chennai and St Peters Medical College Hospital and Research Institute in Krishnagiri -- attached to the state TN Dr MGR Medical University will bring in a total of 600 MBBS seats to the seat matrix in 2021 admissions. VELS Medical college and hospital (deemed university) and Srinivasan Medical College and Hospital (private university) will bring in 150 seats each.

The state has a policy to have at least one government medical College in every district, health minister Ma Subramanian said. The state also plans to increase seats in all existing medical colleges to  250.

 “Besides offering medical care at a reasonable subsidised cost to meritorious students, these medical college hospitals will also help us take tertiary healthcare to the rural parts of the state,” Subramanian said. All these undergraduate medical college hospitals will start postgraduate courses and specialty departments within five years.

TN has sought funds from the centre to start secondary care hospitals in districts with new medical colleges. “The district headquarters hospitals were converted into teaching hospitals and attached to medical colleges. To avoid overcrowding at medical colleges, we will need secondary care hospitals in oldies districts immediately,” he said.





Thursday, December 9, 2021

Dharmapuri medical college caught in a row over hushing up ragging incident


Dharmapuri medical college caught in a row over hushing up ragging incident


DHARMAPURI, DECEMBER 07, 2021 00:03 IST

Four pre-final year students placed under suspension, two wardens resign

Four pre-final year medical college students of the Dharmapuri Government Medical College Hospital were suspended and two wardens, including the chief warden of the hostel, resigned after a second-year student attempted to end his life on Sunday, a week after he sustained injuries allegedly caused by ragging at the medical college hostel.

The student, Saravanan of second year MBBS was found unconscious in his room by fellow students, who were checking in on him after they were alerted by his WhatsApp status. While his condition was stable, medical college administration has been accused of hushing up the victim’s abuse last week, leading to the victim taking the extreme step.

On December 23, Saravanan, a native of Namakkal and hostel resident was admitted to the hospital with injuries. Saravanan was allegedly stripped and beaten up by four senior students Rajkumar, Charan, Gokul and Dhanajayan inside the hostel. Saravanan was discharged a day later on December 24. However, no police complaint was lodged by the hospital authorities. A week later, Saravanan had attempted to end his life in his room.

Speaking to The Hindu, Dean of Medical college hospital K. Amuthavalli said the hospital inquiry was under way after the incident and a committee was inquiring the students. “The committee submitted its report only on Saturday and over 100 students of Saravanan’s batch were questioned and they said the four students were known to commit such an offence. We had to verify before taking action,” said Ms. Amuthavalli, refuting allegations of delay. “We asked his mother to take him home till the inquiry was completed, but the family refused saying, why should he leave the hostel, while the offenders continued to stay there.” said the Dean. All the four accused students were natives of Dharmapuri.

But asked about the absence of police complaint given that ragging was a serious offence, the Dean said, an AR entry (accident register) was made at the time of admission, and it was for the police to check the entry. The hospital need not alert them, said the Dean. However, in medico-legal cases, the doctor is required to intimate the police.

Superintendent of Police Kalaichelvan denied ‘inaction’ by the police. “ I don’t want to indulge in a blame game. The first time (last week), no direct intimation was given by the hospital to the police. It’s standard procedure that upon admission of any person with injuries [in suspicious circumstances], the police should be intimated.”

After rumours of a possible ragging incident surfaced, but no formal complaint was lodged, the police inspector concerned sent out a communication to the hospital authorities underlining that the police should be informed of these incidents, said Mr. Kalaichelvan.

It was projected as a scuffle between students in a hostel and that medical careers were at stake and that the hospital wanted it to be handled as an internal matter to safeguard the reputation of the institution, says the Superintendent of Police.

Saravanan had in the interim sent out a mail to the Medical Commission, feeling let down by the perceived delay in the inquiry by the medical college. He felt isolated and targeted, according to his accounts to the inquiry officer, prior to registering the CSR on Sunday, said a police source. The deputy warden, and the chief warden of the hostel, both associate professors at the hospital resigned from their wardenship on Monday.

Assistance for overcoming suicidal thoughts is available on the State’s health helpline 104 and Sneha’s suicide prevention helpline 044-24640050.

Resident docs call off strike, to resume duty at 9am today


Resident docs call off strike, to resume duty at 9am today

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Jaipur:  09.12.2021

Resident doctors called off their strike on Wednesday evening after the medical education department and representatives of agitating resident doctors’ meeting ended with an agreement.

“We will resume our duties from 9am on Thursday. In the meeting (with medical education department officials), an agreement has been signed, following which we have decided to call off our strike,” said Dr Amit Yadav, president, Jaipur Association of Resident Doctors.

The resident doctors were not working at OPD and IPD for the past 10 days and stopped work in the labour rooms and ICUs for the past five days. From December 6, they went on a complete strike. In the agreement, it has been mentioned that NEET PG counselling decision was being taken care of by the Centre. On the demand for extension of deadline for paper and poster presentations, it has been decided that principals of medical colleges will send letters to the National Medical Commission. The date of thesis submission will be extended to February 28. For Chiranjeevi Swasthya Bima Yojna, a TPA cell will be formed to do the work, which the resident doctors have been doing. Nodal officers will be appointed for in-service doctors for making procedure easy for admissions in PG courses by establishing coordination between medical education department, health directorate and medical colleges. Seats for senior residents will be increased as per the requirement. It is agreed that resident doctors will get three increment extra from the current two.

2 girls born on RTC buses get lifetime pass

2 girls born on RTC buses get lifetime pass

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Hyderabad:  09.12.2021

When two ‘little passengers’ were born unexpectedly on state-run buses, TSRTC management has decided to onboard them for life, designating them as ‘frequent travellers’. The two baby girls have been given free bus travel in TSRTC for life as a birthday gift from the corporation.

The first girl was born on November 30 near Peddakothapally village in a bus belonging to Nagarkurnool depot, while another woman gave birth to her daughter aboard an RTC bus of Asifabad depot near Siddipet of December 7 afternoon. TSRTC crew coordinated with officials of the health department and rushed the mothers and newborns to nearby government hospitals in 108 ambulances for further treatment and the two are doing well.

“These two women unexpectedly went into labour onboard to their respective destinations and the TSRTC crew members and fellow passengers helped the women to deliver their babies. It is a proud moment to bring two lives onboard,” TSRTC vice-chairman and MD VC Sajjanar said.

Masks key to stop & break infection chain: Virologists


Masks key to stop & break infection chain: Virologists

Amrita.Didyala@timesgroup.com

Hyderabad:  09.12.2021

With the threat of the highly mutated Omicron variant of Covid-19 looming, virologists say that wearing a mask when around others, even at home, will be the main preventive weapon. This will be especially required for people having family members in the ‘vulnerable’ category — immunocompromised patients having kidney or lung disease, cancer, have undergone an organ transplantation, uncontrolled diabetes or hypertension among others.

As the pandemic is unlikely to disappear immediately, wearing masks around people is recommended up to April-May next year.

“As Omicron has undergone a high number of mutations, it means that every time the virus mutates it has an adverse environment condition for it prevailing. With large number of people being vaccinated, it has become less damaging to be able to survive. But it appears to be highly infectious, something that it has retained from the mother strain. Therefore, everybody has to wear masks and follow all Covid protocols even if they are double vaccinated as there is every chance of breakthrough infections,” said Dr P Sangram, former director, Institute of Preventive Medicine and state public health laboratory.

The expert also suggested that immune-compromised people, elderly and people with poor nutritional status should go for booster doses whenever available.

State health authorities, meanwhile, have been advocating the use of masks at home for a while now.

“While people have started masking up again since the threat of the new variant, many still do not understand the virus can spread within a family in minutes if a mask is not worn. A mask is the best protection and easiest way to cut out chain of infection,” said Dr G Srinivasa Rao, director public health, Telangana.

But wearing a mask right holds the key. “Wearing the mask properly is more important, which should cover nose and mouth fully. Not just the chin or neck as most people do,” said Dr Ehsan Ahmad Khan, superintendent, Telangana Institute of Medical Sciences (TIMS).

T.N. univerisities face financial crisis as UGC refuses to release funds: Appavu

T.N. univerisities face financial crisis as UGC refuses to release funds: Appavu The Hindu Bureau TIRUNELVELI 03.01.205 The universities in ...