Tribune News Service

Chandigarh, May 20

With 23 patients undergoing treatment at two hospitals in the city, the UT Administration has notified mucormycosis or black fungus as an epidemic.

A notification issued by Arun Kumar Gupta, Principal Secretary, Health, UT, stated that Chandigarh was threatened with the outbreak of dangerous epidemic, namely mucormycosis, among those immune-compromised, especially Covid-19 patients being treated with steroids, and that the ordinary provisions of law in force were insufficient for the management of the disease.

Now, all healthcare facilities, including private, will follow the guidelines issued by the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare for screening, diagnosis and management of mucormycosis.

All healthcare facilities will report each and every suspected or confirmed case of mucormycosis to the Health Department. No person or institution or organisation will spread any information or material for the management of mucormycosis without a permission of the Health Department.

A committee under the chairpersonship of the Director, Health and Family Welfare, UT, will be constituted, which will have specialists of internal medicine, ophthalmology, ENT and epidemiology as members, to review any disobeying by any person or institution of the notification.

In the UT, 16 patients of black fungus are undergoing treatment at the PGI while seven are being treated at the GMCH in Sector 32.

What causes mucormycosis

Conditions making Covid-19 patients prone

Relation with Covid

Symptoms

Initially: Nasal blockade or congestion, nasal discharge (bloody or brown/black), local pain