分类: bharat

  • Though the lockdown in India is supposed to end on May 3, experts suggest the country might lose its momentum in the fight against coronavirus if restrictions are not extended further.

    Though the lockdown in India is supposed to end on May 3, experts suggest the country might lose its momentum in the fight against coronavirus if restrictions are not extended further.

    In an exclusive interview to India Today, Richard Horton, editor-in-chief of leading health journal “The Lancet”, warned that the minimum lockdown in India has to be 10 weeks, else all the good work achieved during this period will be lost and we would be in a situation far worse.

    “The epidemic in each country won’t go on forever, it will burn itself out. Countries are doing the right thing to control the outbreak. If the lockdown is successful in India, you could see a decline in the epidemic around the end of a 10-week time course,” Horton said on Wednesday.

    India Today Data Intelligence Unit (DIU) scanned countries that have either lifted the lockdown or are planning to do so within the next 2-3 weeks and analysed how they have fared so far.

    8-week lockdown in worst-hit countries

    The United States, despite having the highest number of Covid-19 cases, has not announced a nationwide lockdown yet. Governors of several states have ordered people to stay at home and closed all public places but not without retaliation.

    It was reported that in some states, people took to the streets demanding an end to the lockdown. President Donald Trump is also keen to reopen America, notwithstanding the fact that the country reported 8.5 lakh cases as of Thursday morning.

    Spain, the second most affected country with over 2 lakh cases, has been under lockdown since March 14. On Wednesday, the Spanish government extended the lockdown till May 9. Thus the lockdown in Spain will last for at least 57 days.

    Spain had locked down Haro, a small town in the northern part of the country, on March 7. Thus, lockdown in this town will last for at least 64 days. As of April 22, Spain reported more than 2.08 lakh cases, almost 86,000 recoveries and close to 22,000 deaths. Of the remaining 1 lakh cases, 92 per cent are in mild condition.

    Similarly, Italy had imposed a nationwide lockdown on March 9, which is expected to last 57 days till May 3. Italy has more than 1.87 lakh cases, over 54,500 recoveries and 25,000 deaths. According to “worldometers”, of the 1.07 lakh active cases in the country, 98 per cent are in mild condition.

    France announced strict restrictions in the first week of March and a nationwide lockdown on March 17. The lockdown in France will last 56 days till May 11. France has 1.6 lakh coronavirus cases, 40,657 recoveries and 21,340 deaths. Of its 97,000+ active cases, 95 per cent are in mild and 5 per cent in critical condition.

    Wuhan, the epicentre of the pandemic, was locked from January 23 to April 8, when China was able to contain the virus. According to Johns Hopkins University data, as of April 8, the day China opened Wuhan, the recovery rate in the country was 93 per cent.

  • The radical proposal underscores the challenges facing poorer developing countries – including nations like Indonesia and some in Sub-Saharan Africa

    • The radical proposal underscores the challenges facing poorer developing countries – including nations like Indonesia and some in Sub-Saharan Africa
    • The government has maintained its testing criteria gives an accurate tally of India’s number of cases, and says the disease is not spreading untracked

    Controversial given the high risk of deaths, a coronavirus strategy discarded by the UK is being touted as the solution for poor but young countries like India.
    The herd immunity strategy, which would allow a majority of the population to gain resistance to the virus by becoming infected and then recovering, could result in less economic devastation and human suffering than restrictive lockdowns designed to stop the virus’s spread, a number of experts have begun to argue in the nation of 1.3 billion people.
    “No country can afford a prolonged period of lockdowns, and least of all a country like India,” said Jayaprakash Muliyil, a prominent Indian epidemiologist. “You may be able to reach a point of herd immunity without infection really catching up with the elderly. And when the herd immunity reaches a sufficient number the outbreak will stop, and the elderly are also safe.”
    A team of researchers at Princeton University and the Centre for Disease Dynamics, Economics and Policy, a public health advocacy group based in New Delhi and Washington, has identified India as a place where this strategy could be successful because its disproportionately young population would face less risk of hospitalisation and death.
    They said allowing the virus to be unleashed in a controlled way for the next seven months would give 60 per cent of the country’s people immunity by November, and thus halt the disease.

    Mortality could be limited as the virus spreads compared to European nations like Italy given that 93.5 per cent of the Indian population is younger than 65, they said, though no death toll projections were released.

  • History teacher climbs tree to cross internet hurdle to teach students during coronavirus lockdown

    Prosperity is a great teacher, adversity even greater. And adversity in times of the lockdown has brought out the best in Subrata Pati who, unlike most other professionals, isn’t working from home.

    A history teacher, he works from a nest perched on a neem tree, giving lessons to his students on events of seminal importance that shaped civilizations and obliterated them, conquests by kings and generals, and horrors of war and pestilence, as the epoch-making coronavirus disease savages the world.

    Taking classes online is a battle Pati, who teaches at two educational institutes in Kolkata, is fighting from his native Ahanda village in West Bengal’s Bankura district, where his cell phone screen blipped to life one moment and lay dead frozen the next.

    Exasperated, just as he was about to give up, he was struck by the thought of climbing a tree to see if getting a few yards closer to sky made any difference.

    And it did.

     

    35-year-old teacher sets up the DIY (do-it-yourself) marvel

    Now, every morning, the 35-year-old man climbs up the neem tree next to his house and parks himself on a makeshift wooden platform tied to its branches and receives uninterrupted signals on his cell phone he uses too teach his pupils.

    Having set up the DIY (do-it-yourself) marvel with some help from his friends, the history teacher at Adamas University and RICE Education in the city doesn’t find the chore tiring.

    “I have temporarily shifted from my Kolkata residence to Ahanda, which is a part of the state’s Jangalmalal area, to be with my family in the midst of the COVID-19 crisis. That done, I couldn’t have shrugged off my responsibility as a teacher.”

    “The Internet network here is mostly patchy, so I had to look for a solution,” he said.

     

    Two to three classes are conducted at a stretch:

    Pati takes food and water with him to the tree-top platform, made of bamboo, gunny sacks and hay, on days when he has to conduct two to three classes at a stretch.

    “Sometimes the heat and the urge to pee bother me, but I am trying to adjust… sometimes storms and thunder shower damage the platform, but I try and fix it the next day. Under no circumstances I would want my students to be inconvenienced,” he told PTI.

    The attendance is usually high for his classes, said Pati with a broad smile.

     

    Here’s what students have promised in return to the efforts of teacher:

    “The students keep boosting my confidence. They have always been very supportive. They assured me that they would put in their best efforts to score well in my paper,” he said.

    Buddhadeb Maity, one of his students at RICE Education, said Pati was an inspiration for him.

    “What he does for his students is exemplary. I never miss his classes, nor do my friends. In fact, he takes timeout to answer our queries too. Attendance for his classes is usually 90 per cent,” he said.

     

    Idea of setting up the bamboo structure:

    Asked how he chanced upon the idea of setting up the bamboo structure, Pati explained that villagers often build ‘machan’ (makeshift watchtower) on tree-tops during the harvest season to keep an eye on elephants straying into their fields.

    “It is a common practice here. I sought help from some of my friends and together we set up the bamboo platform for my classes,” he said.

    Samit Ray, the chancellor of Adamas University, said the institute was proud of Mr Pati. He has been very sincere about his work from the start. He is shining example of how to surmount obstacles with hard work and willpower, he added.