A late-stage study of Johnson & Johnson’s COVID-19 vaccine candidate has been paused while the company investigates whether a study participant’s unexplained illness is related to the shot.
The pause is at least the second such hold to occur among several vaccines that have reached large-scale final tests in the United States. Final-stage testing of a vaccine made by AstraZeneca and Oxford University remains on hold in the US as officials examine whether an illness in its trial poses a safety risk.
You can track coronavirus cases, deaths and testing rates at the national and State levels here. A list of State Helpline numbers is available as well.
Here are the latest updates:
'Festivals may turn out to be super spreader events'
Member (Health), Niti Aayog, Dr. V.K. Paul: "While the conditions appear to be stabilising, there is a worry that during winter, the pandemic may spread further and the situation may go out of control. Winter is conducive to the spread of respiratory viruses and therefore, more precautions need to be taken. In Europe and US, it is clear that with the onset of winter, the number of cases have gone up, though there may be several other factors."
"In view of these facts, we cannot be lax and we need to be well prepared. This is also the festival season, during which we come together and it may lead to the spread of virus. The festivals may turn out to be super spreader events."
"The change in behaviour, which includes wearing masks and maintaining social distancing, will make the real difference. The public awareness movement should be unprecedented, as is the disease in our lifetime."
Unite2FightCorona campaign
"We need to take precautions as the economy is opening up, educational institutions and cinema halls are opening, winter season and festival seasons are approaching. We need to take precautions," said I&B Secretary Amit Khare during the weekly briefing on COVID-19.
Banners and posters are to be put up at public places till the block level. Front-line workers, including teachers, anganwadi workers, ASHAs, Panchayat sevaks, will be involved. Beneficiaries of government schemes like NGNREGA, PM Awas, PM-Kishan, Ujjawala Yojana, etc, will be targeted through the info campaign on safety measures to be taken to prevent the spread of Covid-19.
In the run-up to the campaign, meeting chaired by Union Home Minister was held on Sept 28. The Prime Minister, through a tweet under the hashtag "Unite2FightCorona", launched the campaign on October 8. It garnered 2.33 billion impressions among 25.1k users with 61.3k mentions and trended at various positions throughout the day on Twitter, including at number 2 during the afternoon.
Covid-19 pledge has been administered in almost 500 Central govt. offices across India
30 Union Ministers, including Home Minister, Defence Minister; 15 Governors and Chief Ministers, around 500 other influencers, including film stars, sports persons and business icons, involved in the campaign
At all the ports and railways, outreach initiatives are being undertaken. State governments have come forward to start the campaign from October 2, Gandhi Jayanthi. Public enterprises, the Education Ministry, Railways, post-offices, banks, para-military forces and State police have also collaborated.
- Devesh Pandey
'India has highest COVID-19 recoveries in the world'
In the weekly COVID-19 briefing, Health Secretary Rajesh Bhushan said India has registered highest recoveries in the world. "Cumulative positivity rate is 8.07%, weekly positivity rate is 5.16%, Active cases are below nine lakh for the fifth consecutive day and it is declining," he noted.
With the increase in testing, there is a decline in positivity rate. On an average 11.36 lakh tests are being carried out per day, the capacity is 15 lakh per day, he said.
Health Minister stresses on COVID-19-appropriate behaviour during festival season, winter months
India has the highest COVID-19 recovery rate of 86.78 per cent globally with 62,27,295 recovered cases and the lowest fatality rate at 1.53 per cent, Union Health Minister Harsh Vardhan said on Tuesday.
Dr. Vardhan, who chaired the 21th meeting of the high-level Group of Ministers (GoM) on COVID-19 via video-conference here, appealed to everyone regarding observance of COVID-19-appropriate behaviour during the forthcoming festival season and the winter months, “when the likelihood of an increase in the disease is high”, the Health Ministry said in a statement. - Devesh Pandey
Dakshina Kannada Deputy Commissioner tests positive for COVID-19
Dakshina Kannada district Deputy Commissioner K V Rajendra, his wife and child have tested positive for coronavirus. He will be in home quarantine for the next two weeks as he is asymptomatic, sources at the DC’s office said.
As a precautionary measure, Mangaluru city Corporation (MCC) Commissioner Commissioner Akshay Sridhar, has also gone into quarantine after the DC tested positive for the virus.
India continues to be among countries with lowest per million COVID-19 cases, deaths
With focussed strategies and calibrated measures, India has sustained its global position of being the country with one of the lowest COVID-19 cases per million and reported deaths per million, the Union Health Ministry said.
From the last five weeks, there has been a continuous decline in the average daily new cases.
“The weekly average of daily new cases fell from 92,830 cases in the second week of September to 70,114 cases in the 2nd week of October,” the ministry said.
COVID-19 graph in Assam starts flattening: Himanta
Assam Health Minister Himanta Biswa Sarma claimed that the COVID-19 curve in the state has started flattening with constant fall in the positivity rate of coronavirus cases.
“There had been a constant decline in the positivity rate last week and it reached a low of 1.8 per cent on Monday,” Mr. Sarma said, adding that the absolute number of new cases has also been falling, while the recovery ratio is currently at over 85 per cent.
“These were important developments during the last 15 days and we can claim that the flattening of the COVID graph has started. “We continue to remain vigilant and careful for a few more days. If this trend continues, we will be sure to win the fight against the virus,” he said. - PTI
Meghalaya defers Garo Hills district council elections
The Meghalaya government has decided to postpone the elections to the Garo Hills Autonomous District Council (GHADC) for an indefinite period in the wake of the COVID-19 crisis and will appoint a board of administrators for the 30-member local body for six months, Chief Minister Conrad K Sangma said.
The current term of the National People’s Party-led executive committee of the council will end on October 18.
A board of administrators headed by the governor will take over the council for six months, he said after a cabinet meeting on Monday evening.
Punjab schools to reopen from Oct 15
The Punjab government said that a decision had been taken to reopen schools and coaching institutions from October 15 in a graded manner.
Students of only classes 9-12 are permitted to attend schools with parental consent and without making attendance compulsory, according to a statement.
However, online classes shall continue to be the preferred mode of teaching and be encouraged.
Testing, tracing should go hand in hand, says Dr. G.V.S. Murthy
PHFI’s IIPH-Hyderabad Director Dr. G.V.S. Murthy reiterated testing and tracing for COVID-19 should go “hand in hand”. There was an initial thrust on contact-tracing protocols but the surge of positive cases simply overwhelmed the health systems — already strained due to shortage of personnel, and the effective tracing has therefore faltered. “This could have been avoided if the governments concerned had called upon other staff and community leadership, trained them and equipped them for contact tracing. Unfortunately, this has not happened and only testing was ramped up and tracing given a short shrift,” he points out.
Digital applications were launched with a lot of fanfare and had tremendous potential for tracing, but this potential was hardly harnessed. A review of 94 studies showed the overall estimate of people infected with SARS-CoV-2 and asymptomatic was 20%. It means majority of infected show some symptoms of COVID-19 which may remain unrecognised or are hidden due to stigma, he explains.
The more such people are tested, the higher will be the test positivity. So there will be a direct relationship between testing and case positivity. To increase the yield of cases through effective tracing will reduce the transmission and that is why testing and tracing should go hand-in-hand, he maintained.
Dasara: only 10,000 devotees to be allowed per day for Durga darshan
District Collector A.Md. Imtiaz has said that only 10,000 devotees per day with pre-booked online tickets will be allowed to have a darshan of goddess Kanakadurga during the nine-day Dasara festivities, a State festival, atop Indrakeeladri starting from October 17. However, on the ‘Moola Nakshatram’ day, which witnesses the highest footfall, 13,000 devotees will be allowed.
Children aged below 10 years and elders aged above 65 would not be allowed and arrangements were made in such a way that only 1,000 persons could be accommodated in an hour. All arrangements were in place, said the Collector.
Mr. Sominaidu said that out of one lakh tickets made available, 67,000 were already bought.
The ‘new normal’ in places of worship
Amid a surge in the number of COVID-19 cases in the city, temples, churches, mosques, and other places of worship have adopted various ‘new normal practices’, though devotees are still adjusting to them. Precautionary measures that are in place to contain the spread of the virus have pushed places of worships to temporarily part from various familiar religious practices.
Departing from the tradition during the Holy Communion, the consecrated bread or wafer is now being dropped into the hands of the communicants. “The Communion is received on the tongue. But due to these unprecedented circumstances, it is now received in the hands with safe distance maintained,” said J.A. Kantharaj, spokesperson of the Archdiocese of Bangalore.
Kuldeep Singh, secretary, Sri Guru Singh Sabha, said the karah prasad at gurudwaras that were distributed by hands were now being given through spoons. “Devotees are just getting used to it and some demand that it be distributed by hands,” he said. Maqsood Imran, Imam of Jamia Masjid at K.R. Market, said those attending prayers were asked to bring their own ‘janamaz’ (prayer mats). Govindraj V. of the ancient Someshwara temple in Halasuru, said teertha and prasada were not being distributed at the temple.
A COVID-proof plan for Malleswaram
Come festive season, thousands throng the commercial areas in Malleswaram, especially 8th Cross. However, this poses a huge risk in spread of COVID-19. To ensure this does not happen, Malleswaram Urban Living Lab (MULL), a collaborative effort between Malleswaram Social, a citizens’ group, and Sensing Local, a do-tank with focus on improving the state of environment and public health, has come out with a “Malleswaram 8th Cross Festival Plan”.
“We conducted surveys and spoke to vendors and shop owners/keepers about the challenges they faced and whether they were able to follow protocols to prevent the spread of COVID-19,” a representative said, adding that while there seemed to be a high level of concern among shop owners, it was lower, among street vendors. While social distancing regulating number of people, displaying awareness material, temperature checks, and hand sanitation were challenges faced by shop owners, for street vendors, contactless payment took precedence. However, the biggest concern for owners was customers not complying with safety measures, especially wearing masks. On the other hand, the biggest concern for street vendors was financial, given that the number of customers had dropped.
MULL worked out two options – demarcating pedestrian-only zones, clearing pavements to allow free movement, moving vendors to a location where they can space out, and creating vending zones for the festival. Under the first option, apart from pedestrianising 8th Cross, smaller pedestrian zones could be created at East Park Road and West Park Road. Traffic could be restricted in the conservancies. This would help accommodate existing and additional vendors. Under the second option, vendors could be relocated to East and West Park Roads, and conservancies.
‘ECMO support can help severely affected COVID-19 patients’
Extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) support can help in treating patients whose lungs are completely affected due to COVID-19, said Mohamed Rela, chairman and managing director, Dr. Rela Institute and Medical Centre (RIMC) on Monday.
He was speaking at a function organised to sign a memorandum of understanding (MoU) between RIMC and KIMS Hospitals, located in Telangana, to set up a Comprehensive Centre of Excellence for Heart and Lung Transplant.
He said if a person’s lungs were affected 100% due to COVID-19, putting the person on ventilator support will not help. “In such cases, ECMO support can be used as a bridge to either help lungs recover or until a transplant is possible,” he said.
Vaccine shot ‘painless’, say Covishield trial volunteers
“It felt like a tetanus shot,” said Joel Joy, 32, who works for a multinational firm in Mumbai, and was among those who’d volunteered for the experimental Covishield vaccine, being tested by the Pune-based Serum Institute of India (SII) at various hospitals in India, “I'll be going to the gym later today,” he added.
The two-dose vaccine candidate is furthest ahead among the COVID-19 vaccines being tested in India. The trial involves 1,600 volunteers in 17 cities across the country likely to be inoculated in the coming months in the combined phase-2/3 trials. These trials check for whether the vaccine is safe and capable of producing an immune response to disarm future infections by the SARS-CoV-2 virus.
According to details of the trial available on the Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR) site, the volunteers will be divided into two groups of 400 and 1,200 respectively with some in each group getting Covishield, some a placebo and yet others getting the Oxford/ChAdOx1. Both ‘Covishield’ and the Oxford/ChAdOx1 have the same virus protein but differ in their make-up — the exact nature of the difference has not been publicly disclosed. The trial also seeks to quantify these differences if any.
Being a double-blinded trial, neither the doctors nor the volunteers know who are the ones vaccinated and who've been given the placebo. The four volunteers who The Hindu spoke to, said they would be going for a follow-up shot on the 29th day.
MLA says Pili Vesha may be allowed during Dasara
Mangaluru City South MLA D. Vedavyas Kamath said on Monday that he is hopeful of the Dakshina Kannada district administration allowing Pili Vesha (tiger dance) during the Dasara celebrations this year as per the traditions of temples.
In a statement here, he said that leaders of different Sharadotsava Samitis and temples have appealed to the Deputy Commissioner to allow the traditional tiger dance in view of the district administration deciding to ban it during the Navaratri celebrations.
The MLA said that he has taken up the matter with the Deputy Commissioner and other senior officials of the government.
He has urged them to allow a limited number of tiger dancers to perform during the Dasara celebrations as the culture and traditions of the land should not be compromised with.
CM to inaugurate Durga Pujas virtually from October 15
Ahead of the Durga Puja festival, West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee on Monday urged people to exercise extreme caution for COVID-19 as she reiterated that community spread of the infection had begun in the State. She said there were instances of the infection being airborne.
“Whether one accepts it or not the infections are also airborne,” Ms. Banerjee told journalists. She said Delhi has allowed only one puja at Chittaranjan Park and Uttar Pradesh has not allowed a single Durga Puja, in West Bengal her government had not stopped any Durga Puja.
This year, the Chief Minister will inaugurate Durga Pujas virtually from October 15 to 17. Clubs which want her to inaugurate their pujas will have to write to the Chief Minister’s Office. The State government has decided to give ₹50,000 to 37,000 clubs that organise community Durga Pujas in the State.
COVID-19 hospitals unaffected amid power outage in Mumbai
Despite the unprecedented power outage in Mumbai and its surrounding areas on Monday, COVID-19 hospitals continued to work uninterrupted, said the Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC).
“Even though the frequency of power cuts within BMC limits is less, all municipal hospitals are equipped with automatic diesel generators at all times. Today, after the power outage, the automatic diesel generators started immediately. The solid waste management department was directed to ensure diesel storage. As a result, all hospitals continued to function without interruption,” the BMC said.
The civic body said its disaster management department ensures that all private COVID-19 hospitals also has necessary supplies of diesel to run generators in case of emergency. “No health services were hampered due to the power outage in Mumbai,” the BMC said.
Anti-microbe drug can fight coronavirus, say scientists
An affordable anti-microbial drug used to treat stomach ulcers and bacterial infections has shown promise in combating the coronavirus in animals, scientists in Hong Kong announced Monday.
Researchers set out to explore whether metallodrugs — compounds containing metal that are more commonly used against bacteria — might also have anti-viral properties that could fight the SARS-CoV-2 coronavirus.
Using Syrian hamsters as tests subjects, they found that one of the drugs, ranitidine bismuth citrate (RBC), was “a potent anti-SARS-CoV-2 agent”.
“RBC is able to lower the viral load in the lung of the infected hamster by tenfold,” Hong Kong University researcher Runming Wang told reporters on Monday as the team presented their study.