Friday, December 3, 2021

SA traveller, B’luru doctor are India’s first Omicron patients


SA traveller, B’luru doctor are India’s first Omicron patients

46-Yr-Old Indian Had No Recent Travel History

Sunitha Rao & Sushmi Dey TNN

Bengaluru/New Delhi: 03.12.2021

India’s first Omicron-infected Covid-19 patients have been detected in Karnataka.

One of them is a 66-yearold flyer from South Africa while the other is a 46-yearold anaesthetist from Bengaluru, the health ministry said on Thursday. Fear of the variant is high, given concerns over its transmissibility and ability to evade vaccine-induced immunity.

“We are tracing three types of contacts — primary, secondary and tertiary. We have already traced the remotest contacts of these two cases,” said Sujeet Kumar Singh, director of the National Centre for Disease Control.

The anaesthetist tested positive on November 22 and five of his contacts tested positive between November 22 and 25, Karnataka health officials said. Their samples have been sent for sequencing. Officials said an absence of travel history for the doctor suggests the presence of the new variant in the community.

The doctor and his contacts are in hospital isolation.


‘6 boosters safe after Covishield shots’

Six different Covid-19 boosters are safe and provoke strong immune response in people who have received a two-dose course of Covishield, the first randomised phase-2 trial of boosters published in The Lancet shows. Apart from the Covishield and Pfizer shots, Novavax, Janssen, Moderna, VLA2001 (Valneva) and CVnCov (Curevac) were studied. P 7

Let us not fear or panic, let us all be responsible: Govt

Thirteen of the doctor’s primary contacts and 205 secondary ones have been traced so far.

The 66-year-old South African national travelled from his country, labelled ‘at risk’, on November 20. Asked to self-isolate at a city hotel, he left on November 27 for Dubai before authorities got the results of his genome sequencing. The two Omicron patients showed only mild symptoms. Both were double-vaccinated.

The new Omicron variant of SARS-CoV2 — first reported by South Africa — is spreading rapidly in many countries and appears to be outcompeting other variants in transmissibility. “The new variant is possibly around 500% more competitively infectious,” said Lav Agarwal, joint secretary in the health ministry.

Omicron is “heavily mutated” with 45-52 amino acid changes across the whole genome and 26-32 changes in the spike protein — the part that attaches to human cells — Agarwal said, underlining that the variant is considered to be highly transmissible, and has improved binding affinity.

However, on the upside, all Omicron patients are found to have mild symptoms so far. The government said the situation is being closely examined and all issues including a ban on international flights is under discussion within the technical and scientific circles. “Let us not fear or panic, let us all be responsible. It is an unfolding situation and we are all learning,” said VK Paul, member health, NITI Aayog.

Officials emphasised that the tools to combat even the new variant remain the same. While full vaccination was underlined as a must to protect against severe disease, officials also stressed on the need to wear masks and adhere to other Covid-appropriate behaviour.

The Bengaluru municipal corporation has traced 264 persons in contact with the man from South Africa and none of them tested positive. In the anaesthetist’s case, a total of 218 contacts have been traced and five of them have tested positive, including three primary contacts and two secondary ones.

› COVID CASES DOUBLE IN A DAY IN SOUTH AFRICA, P 15

Now, book an Uber on WhatsApp


GLOBAL-FIRST INTEGRATION

Now, book an Uber on WhatsApp

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Bengaluru:03.12.2021

Uber has partnered with WhatsApp to allow people to book a ride via Uber’s WhatsApp chatbot. The service is first being launched in India, and Lucknow will be the first city to experience it.

Nandini Maheshwari, senior director of business development in Uber Asia Pacific, said, “We want to make it as easy as possible for all Indians to take an Uber trip, and to do that we need to meet them on platforms they are comfortable with. We are thrilled at this global-first integration for Uber, and look forward to rolling it out across India.”

Ther service is built on WhatsApp Business Platform. Abhijit Bose, head of WhatsApp India, said the WhatsApp Business Platform has been an important lever for businesses that want to build a direct connect with their consumers. “The Uber experience on WhatsApp is simple, familiar, and relatable for users and has the potential to accelerate adoption of Uber with a new category of riders in India,” he said. With this integration, riders will no longer need to download or use the Uber app. From user registration to booking a ride, and getting a trip receipt will be managed within the WhatsApp chat interface.

WhatsApp users can book an Uber ride through three simple ways: messaging to Uber’s business account number; scanning a QR code; or clicking a link directly to open an Uber WhatsApp chat. They will then be asked to provide pickup and drop off locations. Users will receive upfront fare information and the driver’s expected time of arrival.

The companies said that riders will get the same safety features and insurance protections as those who book trips via the Uber app directly. Drivers on Uber’s platform will see no change in their experience with rides booked via WhatsApp.

PG medicos strike to continue


PG medicos strike to continue

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Chennai:03.12.2021

Outpatient services at medical college hospitals in Tamil Nadu were largely unaffected on day two of the protests by resident doctors against delay in NEET postgraduate counselling.

Assistant professors, MBBS doctors (recruited on contract basis) and interns were deployed to take care of the outpatient department and wards in in hospitals of the city.

Given that there was no response from the Union government regarding NEET PG counselling dates, the protesting doctors in the state have announced that they will be boycotting elective surgeries at operation theatres in addition to outpatient and ward services on Friday.

“We ensured that emergency services are intact. Enough doctors will be available at TN Accident and Emergency Care Initiative (TAEI) wards, surgical Intensive Care Units (ICUs), toxicology wards, Intermediate Care Units (IMCUs) and Intermediate Respiratory Care Units (IRCUs),” said R Vignesh from Tamil Nadu Resident Doctors Association (TNRDA).

Thursday, December 2, 2021

MBBS student alleges gang-rape in Alwar; 1 held, other on the run


MBBS student alleges gang-rape in Alwar; 1 held, other on the run

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Alwar:02.12.2021

The Alwar police on Wednesday arrested a 22-yearold youth after a 20-year-old MBBS student alleged that she was gang-raped on Tuesday evening.

Police have identified the main accused as one Ravi Choudhary, while the second accused, Ravindra Choudhary, is currently on the run. Police are also investigating the involvement of the girl’s batchmate in the case.

The Alwar police claimed that the entire incident took place when the girl’s batchmate invited her to the wedding of his sister in Alwar. The batchmate sent his friends Ravi and Ravindra in a car to bring her to the city for the function.

Instead of taking her to the wedding venue, Ravi allegedly took the girl to a hotel where he raped her while Ravindra stood guard outside the room.

The girl sought help and went to a nearby police station on Tuesday evening where she narrated her ordeal.


Probe against friend who sent invitation

Alwar: The girl sought help and went to a nearby police station on Tuesday evening where she narrated her ordeal. Police recorded her statements on Wednesday, following which they arrested prime accused Ravi Choudhary.

The case is being investigated by additional SP Rameshwar Choudhary.

A medical examination was held on Wednesday.

While Ravi Choudhary has been identified as the main accused in the case, investigation is also underway against the girl’s batchmate who invited her to the wedding.

Both Ravindra and the girl’s batchmate have been booked for aiding the crime. The preliminary investigation indicated that the girl and her batchmate, both hailing from the same city, were studying MBBS at a foreign university.

Jr docs threaten to boycott all services from Dec 4


Jr docs threaten to boycott all services from Dec 4

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Hyderabad:02.12.2021

Junior doctors at the state-run Gandhi Hospital and Osmania General Hospital (OGH) boycotted outpatient (OP) services on Wednesday over repeated delay in NEET counselling by the Centre. The OP boycott would continue for two more days and the Telangana Junior Doctors’ Association (TJUDA) has threatened to extend it to all services from December 4 if the Centre failed to act.

On Wednesday, the patients were only partially affected, but if junior doctors go ahead with their threat then things would become difficult for patients from December 4. “The impact of boycott on Wednesday was not felt sharply as patient footfall has been less for last two days. It might be due to the news of the new variant of Covid-19. Instead of 5 doctors manning a department, today 2-3 were present. It only caused a delay of 30-40 minutes,” said a source at Gandhi Hospital.

“While we only boycotted OP services today, if no measures are taken by government to speed up the process, we’ll escalate the protest after meeting with all other RDAs. Currently, other staff were able to handle most departments, but if we extend it to all services then it’ll be difficult to manage,” said TJUDA president Dr Sagar Dharmula.


Junior doctors protest at Gandhi Hospital

On holiday plans, domestic flyers wait and watch for now


On holiday plans, domestic flyers wait and watch for now

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Mumbai:02.12.2021

Demand for domestic travel had peaked in the past two months during the festive season and the year was supposed to end with a bang, what with travellers making advance bookings for the year-end holiday. But the Maharashtra government directive that made RT-PCR reports mandatory for all inter-state arrivals has left many year-end travel plans in a limbo, say travel industry insiders.

“The major concern is about spending January 1 queueing up at Goa’s testing centres and hospitals to undergo an RT-PCR test. The next day is a Sunday, most testing places in Goa would be closed. Most passengers are booked to return to Mumbai on Sunday evening and Monday morning,” said a travel agent. He added that passengers booked on the domestic sector have adopted a wait-and-watch policy. “We’re expecting some air ticket cancellations in the coming weeks, but people might not entirely abandon their year-end plans. We expect inter-state road travel to pick up. The past two peaks have shown that RT-PCR reports aren’t checked diligently on roads,” he added.

Currently, the cheapest return ticket for year-end travel on non-stop flights between Mumbai and Goa — the most popular year-end route — starts at Rs 11,000. Prashant Pitti, co-foundrf EaseMyTrip, said they had witnessed more than 400% jump in advance air ticket bookings for Decmber. “About 65-75% of travellers have opted for the full-refund booking options since the second wave, and with the new variant, this number is expected to grow in the coming weeks,” he added.

The major concern is about spending January 1 queueing up at Goa’s testing centres and hospitals to undergo an RT-PCR test. The next day is a Sunday, most testing places in Goa would be closed

SC: Doctors can’t be always blamed for negligence in deaths

AmitAnand.Choudhary@timesgroup.com

New Delhi:02.12.2021

The Supreme Court has said that a hospital cannot be held liable for negligence if operation of a patient is delayed because of nonavailability of operation theatres and ruled that doctors also cannot be always blamed if a patient did not favourably respond to treatment or a surgery failed.

Setting aside the order National Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission which held Bombay Hospital & Medical Research Centre and its doctors liable for medical negligence for death of a patient, a bench of Justices Hemant Gupta and V Ramasubramanian said that the fault cannot always be fastened on the doctors and hospital if a patient did not survive. It said that delay in conducting some medical test due to fault in machine can also not be said to be negligence on the part of the doctor or the hospital, saying “Any machine can become non-functional because of innumerable factors beyond the human control as the machines involve various mechanical, electrical and electronic components”

“No fault can be attached to the hospital if the operation theatres were occupied when the patient was taken for surgery. Operation theatres cannot be presumed to be available at all times. Therefore, non-availability of an emergency operation theatre during the period when surgeries were being performed on other patients is not a valid ground to hold the Hospital negligent in any manner,” the bench said...

NEWS TODAY 10.07.2026