
Coronavirus India News Live Updates: Cautioning people against lowering their guard till an effective anti-coronavirus medicine is developed, Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Saturday came up with a slogan in Hindi to drive home his point. He said, ‘Jab tak dawai nahi, tab tak dhilai nahi’ (No carelessness till a medicine is found).
India reported nearly 1 lakh (97,570) coronavirus cases in the last 24 hours ending 8 am on Saturday. With this, the total tally went past the 46 lakh-mark to reach 46,59,985. Also, as many as 1,201 deaths reported during the same period pushed the death toll to 77,472. At present, the country has 9,58,316 active cases and 36,24,197 people who have been treated and discharged.
Meanwhile, with the reopening of service on the Airport Express Line, the Delhi Metro resumed its full services from Saturday. Now the metro trains will run from 6 am to 11 PM on all lines, the Delhi Metro Rail Corporation (DMRC) said.
A study on the first national sero surveillance to estimate the prevalence of the novel coronavirus, conducted in May, shows that as many as 8.56 lakh cases were present in the 233 districts deemed ‘zero-caseload’ at the time — confirming the under-detection of cases in the country.
Globally, over 28 million have been affected while 915,356 have succumbed to the virus so far and as many as 19,215,800 have recovered. The United States continued to remain the worst-affected, followed by India and Brazil.
Two more coronavirus positive elderly persons succumbed to the infection in Ladakh, bringing the number of deaths linked to the disease to 38 in the Union Territory, officials said on Saturday. Both the deaths were reported from Leh district on Friday, the officials said. The deceased, aged 98 and 82, had tested positive for COVID-19 a few days back, they said. The officials said the two were also suffering from other ailments and age-related issues. (PTI)
The Delhi High Court on Saturday said it has reduced the number of benches that would be holding physical hearings due to the "alarming" rise in COVID-19 cases in the national capital and majority of lawyers preferring virtual hearings. According to a note issued by the office of Registrar General Manoj Jain, a full court of the judges of the Delhi High Court deliberated on continuing with physical hearings, which were started from September 1, and decided not to discontinue them completely.
The full court decided that physical hearings would be conducted each day, from September 15 onwards, by one division bench and two single judge benches on rotation. Till now, two division benches and three single judge benches were holding physical courts on rotational basis.
With a record 81,533 people recuperating from COVID-19 in a day, India's total recoveries on Saturday surged to 36,24,196 of which 60 per cent of the cases are from five states, including Maharashtra, Andhra Pradesh and Karnataka. India's COVID-19 case fatality rate has further dropped to 1.66 per cent while the recovery rate has risen to 77.77 per cent, according to the Union Health Ministry.
Sixty per cent of the total recovered cases are being reported from five states - Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka and Uttar Pradesh, the ministry said on Saturday.
Maharashtra has alone contributed more than 14,000 and Karnataka has contributed over 12,000 to the new single-day recoveries, it highlighted. Also, 60 per cent of the total cases are reported from only five states - Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka and Uttar Pradesh.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Saturday called for strengthening the poor in order to remove poverty. He said the Pradhan Mantri Awas Yojana (PMAY) is aimed at empowering the poor.
Modi was speaking at the virtual housewarming ceremony of 1.75 houses built in rural parts of Madhya Pradesh under the PMAY. "To remove poverty, we have to strengthen the poor and this scheme is aimed at empowering them only," he said. Modi also interacted with some of the beneficiaries of the project.
While a prone position may ease breathing in severely ill COVID-19 patients on ventilators, scientists say this life-saving, face-down posture can also cause permanent nerve damage in these vulnerable individuals. According to the researchers, including those from Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine in the US, the nerve damage is a result of reduced blood flow and inflammation, which other non-COVID-19 patients on ventilators in this position rarely experience. Based on the study, accepted for publication in the British Journal of Anaesthesia, the scientists said this type of injury has been missed because critically ill people are expected to wake up with some generalised weakness when they have been bedridden.
Mumbai's dabbawalas or lunch-box carriers have urged the Maharashtra government to permit them to travel in local trains, which are currently running in a restricted manner in light of the COVID-19 outbreak, an official said on Saturday. Access to local trains will enable dabbawalas to resume their business with full capacity, said Subhash Talekar, president of Mumbai Dabbawala Association.
At present, only people employed in essential services are allowed to travel in suburban trains. "Dabbawalas are also part of essential services are they deliver food to Mumbaikars. And since most officers are now functioning with reduced capacity, people have been asking us to deliver their meals," Talekar said.
Telangana-based Bharat Biotech India (BBL) Friday said animal trials of Covaxin, its Covid-19 vaccine candidate, were successful. In a press release, the company said Covaxin generated “robust immune responses”.
“The vaccine candidate was found to generate robust immune responses. Thus, preventing infection and disease in the primates upon high amounts of exposure to live SARS-CoV-2 virus,” the company stated, adding that the results “demonstrate the protective efficacy in a live viral challenge model”.
Bharat Biotech had tested its vaccine candidate on four groups of 20 rhesus macaques. The primates were administered a “two-dose vaccination regimen of inactivated SARS-CoV-2 vaccine”.
Cautioning people against lowering their guard till an effective anti-coronavirus medicine is developed, Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Saturday came up with a slogan in Hindi to drive home his point. He said, 'Jab tak dawai nahi, tab tak dhilai nahi' (No carelessness till a medicine is found).
Modi gave this slogan while addressing the virtual housewarming ceremony of 1.75 lakh houses built in rural parts of Madhya Pradesh under the Pradhan Mantri Awas Yojana (PMAY). "Jab tak dawai nahi, tab tak dhilai nahi. Do gaj ki doori, mask hai jaroori (Face mask and maintainting distance of two yards is necessary)," he said.
Meanwhile, the number of confirmed infections in Maharashtra crossed the one million (10-lakh) mark on Friday, with the addition of almost 25,000 new cases. The state has almost the double number of confirmed infections compared to Andhra Pradesh, which has the second highest caseload in the country. Maharashtra also has also recorded the highest number of deaths, more than 29,000, which is close to 40 per cent of all coronavirus-related deaths in the country.
Uttar Pradesh recorded its highest single day rise on Friday, with more than 7,000 new infections getting detected. The confirmed infections are now just a shade below 3 lakh, a figure which most certainly would be crossed on Saturday.
On Friday, more than 97,500 new cases were detected across the country, taking the total number of confirmed infections to 46.59 lakh, of which more than 36.24 lakh, or about 78 per cent have recovered from the disease. The number of active cases is now 9.58 lakh.
Kerala, the first state in the country to have been affected by the novel coronavirus epidemic, now has over one lakh people who have been infectedwith the disease. Close to 3,000 new cases were detected in Kerala on Friday, which took the total confirmed infections past the one lakh mark, the 13th state in the country to have crossed that figure.
At one point, Kerala was seen to have brought the epidemic under control. After recording the first 500 cases by the end of April, the state had been reporting news cases in no more than single digits, on some days not at all. By that time, Maharashtra had started discovering more than 1,000 cases a day. States like Delhi, Tamil Nadu and Gujarat were finding several hundred cases every day. The state was hailed as a model in effective containment.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi takes part in a programme - ‘Grih Pravesh’ organised under Pradhan Mantri Awaas Yojana (Gramin) in Madhya Pradesh, through video conference. Madhya Pradesh CM Shivraj Singh Chouhan also participates in the event.
Safety and efficacy are the two words used to describe the requirements for any new therapy, including vaccines. This article details the specific metrics behind these generic descriptors that a Covid-19 vaccine will have to satisfy.
The other questions tackled are: When will a vaccine be available? Is the vaccine being fast-tracked, and, therefore, unsafe? Can we trust the vaccine when it is approved? As much as we all would like the comfort of certainty, all of these questions have answers with caveats. Some reasons for the ambiguity are articulated here.
Serum Institute of India (SII) said on Thursday (September 10) that it would pause the ongoing clinical trials in India of the Covid-19 vaccine candidate developed by the University of Oxford. The move follows a show-cause notice issued by the drug regulator to the Pune firm over a single adverse reaction that was detected at one of the global trial sites.
SII is sponsoring mid- and late-stage human clinical trials for the vaccine candidate in India. The firm, the world’s largest vaccine manufacturer, has been contracted by the Swedish-British pharma giant AstraZeneca and the University of Oxford to manufacture the vaccine for low- and middle-income countries. Prabha Raghvan explains why this may not be a serious blow
India reported nearly 1 lakh (97,570) coronavirus cases in the last 24 hours ending 8 am on Saturday. With this, the total tally went past the 46 lakh-mark. Also, as many as 1,201 deaths reported during the same period pushed the death toll to 77,472. At present, the country has 9,58,316 active cases and 36,24,197 people who have been treated and discharged.
Congress leader Rahul Gandhi Saturday took to Twitter to attack the Centre on its ‘well-planned fight' against Covid-19. 'Modi Govt’s ‘well-planned fight’ against Covid has put India in an abyss of: 1. Historic GDP reduction of 24% 2. 12 crore jobs lost 3. 15.5 lac crores additional stressed loans 4. Globally highest daily Covid cases & deaths. But for GOI & media ‘sab changa si’,' he tweeted.
As the Tripura government fights charges of negligence and lack of infrastructure at the state’s only coronavirus-dedicated hospital, among rising cases, the High Court on Friday took suo motu cognizance of the matter. It directed the state government to submit an affidavit by September 18, including a detailed break-up of treatment centres, and the infrastructure, medicines, workforce and funds available to fight Covid-19.
The order, by a Division Bench including Chief Justice Akil Qureshi, followed weeks of posts on social media highlighting the conditions at Govind Ballabh Pant (GBP) Hospital in Agartala, attached to Agartala Government Medical College (AGMC).
With the reopening of service on the Airport Express Line, the Delhi Metro resumed its full services from Saturday. Now the metro trains will run from 6 am to 11 PM on all lines, the Delhi Metro Rail Corporation (DMRC) said.
"The gap between the percentage of recovered cases and active cases progressively growing wide. More than 3/4 of total cases (more than 36 lakhs) recovered and discharged. Active Cases (less than 10.5 lakhs) only a small proportion (less than 1/4) of total cases," the Ministry of Health has said.
"Centre-led COVID-19 management strategies have focused on early detection through widespread, easy & aggressive testing; standardised quality and effective treatment in hospitals and supervised home/facility isolation and reducing mortality," the health ministry added.
A study on the first national sero surveillance to estimate the prevalence of the novel coronavirus, conducted in May, shows that as many as 8.56 lakh cases were present in the 233 districts deemed ‘zero-caseload’ at the time — confirming the under-detection of cases in the country.
The data also reveals that these districts may have actually accounted for a significant 13 per cent of the total Covid-19 caseload in May, two months after the first coronavirus case in the country.
The study, published in the Indian Journal of Medical Research on Friday, says that of the 64.68 lakh infections estimated in the country at the time, 8.56 lakh were in the zero districts; 18.17 lakh in low-prevalence districts; 15.18 lakh in medium-prevalence districts; and 22.76 lakh in high-prevalence ones.
Safety and efficacy are the two words used to describe the requirements for any new therapy, including vaccines. This article details the specific metrics behind these generic descriptors that a Covid-19 vaccine will have to satisfy.
The other questions tackled are: When will a vaccine be available? Is the vaccine being fast-tracked, and, therefore, unsafe? Can we trust the vaccine when it is approved? As much as we all would like the comfort of certainty, all of these questions have answers with caveats.