分类: bharat

  • In over two months, India reported the first reduction in active Covid-19 cases on Monday, and followed the trend on Tuesday. However, about 90 per cent of districts in India are showing a Covid-19 positivity rate of over 10 per cent.

    In over two months, India reported the first reduction in active Covid-19 cases on Monday, and followed the trend on Tuesday. However, about 90 per cent of districts in India are showing a Covid-19 positivity rate of over 10 per cent.

    Active Covid-19 cases dip, 18 states show decline but 90% districts are now hotspots

    In over two months, India reported the first reduction in active Covid-19 cases on Monday, and followed the trend on Tuesday. However, about 90 per cent of districts in India are showing a positivity rate of over 10 per cent.

    In over two months, India reported the first reduction in active Covid-19 cases on Monday, and followed the trend on Tuesday. However, about 90 per cent of districts in India are showing a Covid-19 positivity rate of over 10 per cent.

    In over two months, India reported the first reduction in active Covid-19 cases on Monday, and followed the trend on Tuesday. Given that India is still reporting over 3 lakh Covid-19 cases a day, the volume of recoveries is remarkable, but it only fits the pandemic arithmetic. More people had caught the virus over two weeks ago.

    The Union health ministry data shows that as many as 18 states are showing signs of a decline in the second wave of Covid-19 pandemic. These states include the worst-hit ones including Maharashtra, Delhi, Uttar Pradesh, Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, Telangana and Bihar.

    Major uptick states are in the Northeast, West Bengal, Odisha, Tamil Nadu, Kerala — which has remained a major epicentre since 2020, Karnataka, Goa, Punjab, Haryana, Himachal Pradesh and Uttarakhand.

  • With Covid-19 reaching rural pockets of Uttar Pradesh, the fragile rural healthcare system is crumbling under pressure. The people are now turning to religion for protection instead.

    With Covid-19 reaching rural pockets of Uttar Pradesh, the fragile rural healthcare system is crumbling under pressure. The people are now turning to religion for protection instead.

    No toilets and doctors missing, UP villages bank on faith to battle Covid

    With Covid-19 reaching rural pockets of Uttar Pradesh, the fragile rural healthcare system is crumbling under pressure. The people are now turning to religion for protection instead.

    With hospitals few and far apart and a negligible testing capacity, the healthcare system of rural Uttar Pradesh is not able to cope and the people have now begun to turn to religious rituals for protection.

  • As Covid cases surge in India, many are finding solace in crayons, pencil and water colours and in creating something new to keep their mental peace

    As Covid cases surge in India, many are finding solace in crayons, pencil and water colours and in creating something new to keep their mental peace

    Lata Chaudhry, who suffers from advanced-stage Alzheimer’s and dementia paints to heal her rising anxiety during the pandemic

    Paints, canvasses and brushes have replaced the dull sight of forlorn roads and anxiety-inducing news reports in Lata Chaudhry’s daily routine. The 84-year-old Bandra resident, who suffers from advanced-stage Alzheimer’s and dementia, spends long hours painting village scenes and figures. Her focus is now fixed on depicting the Warli tribe that lives in the mountains along the Maharashtra-Gujarat border. This activity is the only proverbial silver lining in the day of the octogenarian who was getting adversely impacted by news of disease, suffering and death and the soundless lanes during the lockdown. In a bid to add a dash of hope and colour into her life, her son Paresh brought in a set of canvasses and paints a few months ago and urged Chaudhry to rekindle her long lost love for painting. Her family claims that ever since she picked up her paint brushes, “there has been no looking back”.

    Like Chaudhry, several people are finding solace in different forms of art that help relieve anxiety. From painting and embroidery to knitting and origami, activities that requires concentration and give the doer a feeling of having created something new, are being used to help soothe frayed nerves. “When you are creating art, you are completely one with yourself. There is a feeling of fulfilment because you are creating something from scratch and to watch your creation come to life is very therapeutic,” says Akshita Gandhi, artist and founder of the Dua Foundation.

    As the number of infections and deaths soar dangerously, an increasing number of people are discovering how sketch pens, crayons, pencils and water colours can alleviate anxiety. Even as she anxiously awaited updates from the hospital on the health of her Covid-infected husband and parents, Aisha Dhuru, 38, ordered knitting needles and wool, and “furiously knitted all day”. “It requires total attention and focus and that helped me block negative thoughts which were leading to severe anxiety and sleeplessness,” she says.

    Art has, for long, been used by alternative healing practitioners to work with patients working through mental health issues. And just as sketching can help people pour their feelings and emotions on paper, colours have the ability to evoke emotions. “If you are going through some kind of physical pain, surround yourself with a lot of green colour. It is believed that you start to heal faster as green symbolises life and nurturing,” says Gandhi. The concept relates to the colours of the energy fields in the body that are believed to play a role on mental and physical health.

    With the pandemic raging across the country and people losing both loved ones and livelihoods, anxiety levels are bound to be on the rise, which, if left unchecked, can lead to severe mental ailments. “Breathlessness, sleeplessness, cold sweat, depression or palpitations are all a part of what we are experiencing around us today. That’s where art can step in. Spending even 30 minutes every day on creating something can alleviate stress and help combat anxiety because it distracts you from the negativity and immerses you in a happy feeling,” says Roohi Jain, a counsellor who uses art and music for healing patients.

    Noting this demand for a creative activity, several brands have launched art kits that provide the necessary tools and activity sheets for people to revisit art classes from their school days. But as Jain explains, art as a healing tool does not need you to create picture-perfect paintings. Scribbling, doodling, sketching or abstract strokes of paint on canvas or paper can still be therapeutic.