COVID-19: Entire focus of Delhi govt is on saving lives of people, says Manish Sisodia

By: |
Published: June 4, 2020 3:43:53 PM

In a joint virtual press conference with Delhi Heath Minister Satyendar Jain, he also urged people who are infected by coronavirus but are asymptomatic to remain at home and isolate themselves.

Manish Sisodia, COVID-19, delhi government, Satyendar Jain, COVID-19 tally in Delhi, covid 19 death in delhi,latest news on manish sisodiaDeputy Chief Minister Manish Sisodia (IE photo)

The entire focus of the Delhi government is on saving lives of people and providing adequate facilities for COVID-19 patients who need hospital care, Deputy Chief Minister Manish Sisodia said on Thursday.

In a joint virtual press conference with Delhi Heath Minister Satyendar Jain, he also urged people who are infected by coronavirus but are asymptomatic to remain at home and isolate themselves.

Jain said an order had been issued to have 20 per cent beds reserved in 61 private hospitals. “We already have our dedicated COVID-19 facilities. Three more private hospitals were added yesterday. And, if those private hospitals with mixed use (20 per cent reserved beds) are facing logistic issues, then they can be fully converted to dedicated COVID-19 facilities,” Sisodia said.

A record single-day spike of 1,513 fresh cases took the COVID-19 tally in Delhi to beyond 23,000-mark on Wednesday and the death toll due to the disease climbed to 606, authorities said.

Get live Stock Prices from BSE, NSE, US Market and latest NAV, portfolio of Mutual Funds, calculate your tax by Income Tax Calculator, know market’s Top Gainers, Top Losers & Best Equity Funds. Like us on Facebook and follow us on Twitter.

Financial Express is now on Telegram. Click here to join our channel and stay updated with the latest Biz news and updates.

Next Stories
1Coronavirus in Madhya Pradesh: Indore COVID-19 tally up by 36 to 3,633; death toll 145
2Pakistan surpasses China in COVID-19 cases; infections surges to 85, 246
3West Bengal records 10 more COVID-19 fatalities, 340 new cases of infection