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Coronavirus LIVE Updates: Delhi’s COVID-19 positivity rate falls below 2%, lowest in nearly two months

Coronavirus LATEST News and Updates: Delhi recorded 1,491 new coronavirus cases and 130 deaths on Wednesday, while the positivity rate declined to 1.93 percent, according to the daily health bulletin

FP Staff May 26, 2021 17:23:34 IST
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Coronavirus LIVE Updates: Delhi’s COVID-19 positivity rate falls below 2%, lowest in nearly two months

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15:50 (ist)

Coronavirus LATEST Updates

Wockhardt offers to make 2 billion Covid vaccine doses a year

Pharma firm Wockhardt has approached the Indian government for help in tying up with COVID-19 vaccine makers, sources have told CNBC-TV18.

The company has informed the government that it has three facilities which can be repurposed to manufacture vaccines, the sources said, adding that specifically, the Mumbai-based pharma player is seeking collaborations with vaccines using BSL1 and BSL2 technology, they said.

Wockhardt has said that it has the capacity to produce up to 2 billion doses of COVID-19 vaccines a year and can have an initial output of 500 million doses ready by February 2022, the Indian Express reported.

14:26 (ist)

Coronavirus LATEST Updates

Not authorised anyone to import, distribute vaccine in India: Pfizer

Pfizer said that neither the company nor its global affiliates have authorised anyone to import, market and distribute the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine, MoneyControl reported.

Pfizer's statement came on the heels of the submission of an expression of interest for supplying COVID-19 vaccines in response to a global tender floated by the Municipal Corporation of Greater Mumbai (MCGM).

14:03 (ist)

Coronavirus LATEST Updates

B.1.617.2 variant found in health workers of Delhi’s Apollo Hospital

A study involving 69 healthcare workers at Delhi's Apollo Hospital, who tested positive for COVID-19 after being vaccinated, found that the B.1.617.2 variant was detected in 48 percent of their samples, according to reports.

The B.1.617.2 variant has been declared a variant of concern by the World Health Organization (WHO).

The study was conducted on 69 health care workers who were infected after vaccination in the first 100 days of India’s vaccination drive. All the workers had received the Covishield vaccine and 51 were fully vaccinated, while 18 had received only one dose of the vaccine, The Indian Express reported.

LIVE NEWS and UPDATES

May 26, 2021 - 17:41 (IST)

Coronavirus LATEST Updates

Telangana Cabinet to meet on 30 May to take call on lockdown extension 

 Telangana Cabinet will meet on May 30 to discuss several issues, including the extension of the ongoing lockdown to contain the spread of COVD-19.

Chief Minister K Chandrashekhar Rao has decided to hold the State Cabinet meeting on May 30 (Sunday) at 2 PM," an official press release said here on Wednesday.

In the meeting, the Cabinet would discuss about agriculture - crops in the State, the ongoing paddy procurement process, availability of seeds and fertilisers, curbing the supply of spurious seeds - coronavirus, lockdown and other subjects, the release said.

The State has been under lockdown since May 12 and would go on upto May 30.

May 26, 2021 - 17:25 (IST)

Coronavirus LATEST Updates

PM says vaccine absolutely important to save lives, defeat COVID-19

Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Wednesday described COVID-19 vaccines as "absolutely important to save lives and defeat the pandemic", noting that this "once-in-a-lifetime" crisis has brought tragedy and sufferings at doorsteps of many and caused huge economic impact.

Delivering the keynote address on the occasion of "Vesak Global Celebrations" on Buddha Purnima, he said the pandemic has impacted every nation, adding that the planet will not be the same after this and the events in future will be remembered as either pre or post-Covid.

He, however, added that there have been many noteworthy developments which strengthen our strategy to fight it.

"Most importantly, we have the vaccine which is absolutely important to save lives and defeat the pandemic," Modi said, asserting that the emergence of jabs within a year of the COVID-19 outbreak shows the power of human determination and tenacity.

May 26, 2021 - 17:11 (IST)

Coronavirus LATEST Updates

Only way to decrease variants of COVID-19 is by increasing vaccination: Gagandeep Kang

Stressing that the only way to decrease variants of COVID-19 is by increasing vaccination, prominent clinical scientist Gagandeep Kang said massive inoculation being a mistake is a topic brought up with "pseudo-scientific messy incorrect immunology".

She was reacting to French virologist and Nobel laureate Luc Montagnier's comments on mass vaccination.

Kang said that apparently he did not say all vaccinated people will die in two years, as claimed by some, but he did say that new variants are created through selection imposed by antibodies made through vaccination.

"And he said there will be much stronger infection by variants in vaccinated individuals due to antibody dependent enhancement, massive vaccination is an enormous error, a medical mistake," Kang tweeted, and termed his claims as "not true".

Kang said, "When we are infected or vaccinated we make antibodies in response to a whole virus or part of a virus. In a viral infection, the body's immune responses, including antibodies, shut down viral replication and we recover from infection".

May 26, 2021 - 16:59 (IST)

Coronavirus LATEST Updates

Tripura govt extends corona curfew till 5 June

The Tripura government has announced extension of the corona curfew in Agartala Municipal Corporation (AMC) areas and all urban local bodies (ULB) till June 5 to contain the spread of the pandemic.

Earlier, a corona curfew was imposed in AMC areas and ULBs across the state on May 17, and a night curfew in other parts of Tripura till 26 May. State Education Minister and government spokesperson Ratan Lal Nath said the council of ministers on Tuesday resolved to extend the corona curfew given the COVID-19 surge in the state.

"Strict measures will be taken to implement the restrictions imposed by the administration," Nath said.

In addition, the corona night curfew will continue from 4 pm to 5 am in all areas till June 6.

May 26, 2021 - 16:41 (IST)

Coronavirus LATEST Updates

States unable to procure vaccines from international market: Kejriwal

Arvind Kejriwal urged the Centre to give the required vaccine doses to the states. “Then, it is our job to inoculate the people and we will do it,” he adds. "Not even a single state government has been successful in procuring vaccine doses from the international market."

"Within 24 hours, companies which manufacture vaccines can be directed to ramp up production. Why isn’t the Centre showing the required sense of urgency regarding this?" he asked.

May 26, 2021 - 16:27 (IST)

Coronavirus LATEST Updates

No state has been able to procure even one extra vaccine dose, says Delhi CM

Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal addressing a press conference on Wednesday said that no state has been able to procure even one extra vaccine dose from manufacturers. 

"There's no vaccine in Delhi; for 4 days vaccination centres for the 18-44 age group are shut & not just here but across India, several centres are shut. Today when we should have opened new centres, but now we are also shutting the existing ones, which is not good. As per my knowledge, no state govt has been able to procure a single dose of vaccine till now. Vaccine companies have denied speaking to the state governments. This is the time to unite and work for both State and Centre, and not work separately."

May 26, 2021 - 16:21 (IST)

Coronavirus LATEST Updates

Delhi’s COVID positivity rate dips below 2%, lowest in nearly two months

Delhi recorded 1,491 fresh coronavirus cases and 130 fatalities on Wednesday, while the positivity rate declined to 1.93 percent, according to the daily health bulletin. This is the fourth day in a row when the daily cases in the national capital have remained below 2,000.

"Positivity down to 1.93% and total positive cases come down to 1491. These are the lowest numbers in the last 2 months. We still need to take all precautions and follow covid appropriate behaviour," Health Minister Satyendar Jain tweeted.

The national capital had recorded 1,568 cases and 156 fatalities on Tuesday, while the positivity rate came down marginally to 2.14 percent. According to the latest health bulletin, the 130 new fatalities pushed the death toll to 23,695.

May 26, 2021 - 16:12 (IST)

Coronavirus LATEST Updates

Centre's data on vaccine wastage incorrect, says Chhattisgarh CM

The Chhattisgarh administration on Wednesday said that the Union health ministry’s data on vaccine wastage was incorrect, reports ANI. “We have written to them already and we are working with them to resolve the data issues,” it says.

Earlier, the Union health ministry said that Chhattisgarh wasted 30.2% of its vaccines. It urged Chhattisgarh and other state and Union Territories to keep the wastage under 1%. The vaccines wastage for Jharkhand is 37.3%, Tamil Nadu 15.5%, Jammu & Kashmir 10.8% and Madhya Pradesh 10.7%, according to the ministry.

Jharkhand chief minister’s office also clarifies that the vaccine wastage in the state is only 4.65% as against Union health ministry’s data showing 37.3%. “Vaccination data could not be fully updated to the central CoWin Server/Platform due to technical difficulties & the updation is in process,” it adds.

May 26, 2021 - 16:01 (IST)

Coronavirus LATEST Updates

UK expands COVID vaccine programme to cover all over-30s

The UK's health service on Wednesday extended its COVID-19 age-based vaccination programme to the next cohort to cover everyone aged 30 and over.

The National Health Service (NHS) said 1 million more people aged 30 and 31 will be invited by text over the coming days, leaving only adults between 18 and 29 yet to get the nod to come forward for their first doses.

It is the latest in a series of expansions this month opening up the vaccinations to people in their thirties, who are to be offered an alternative to the Oxford/AstraZeneca jabs either Pfizer/BioNtech or Moderna following medical advice related to rare blood clot concerns for lower age groups.

Our vaccination programme is moving at such a phenomenal pace and I am delighted that less than six months after Margaret Keenan received the first authorised jab in the world, we are now able to open the offer to everyone in their thirties and over, said UK Health Secretary Matt Hancock.

May 26, 2021 - 15:50 (IST)

Coronavirus LATEST Updates

Wockhardt offers to make 2 billion Covid vaccine doses a year

Pharma firm Wockhardt has approached the Indian government for help in tying up with COVID-19 vaccine makers, sources have told CNBC-TV18.

The company has informed the government that it has three facilities which can be repurposed to manufacture vaccines, the sources said, adding that specifically, the Mumbai-based pharma player is seeking collaborations with vaccines using BSL1 and BSL2 technology, they said.

Wockhardt has said that it has the capacity to produce up to 2 billion doses of COVID-19 vaccines a year and can have an initial output of 500 million doses ready by February 2022, the Indian Express reported.

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LATEST News and Updates: Adding that state governments are unable to procure vaccine doses from international market, the Delhi CM said it was the job of the Centre "to procure the doses and it is our job to inoculate the people and we will do it."

Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal on Wednesday said the manufacturers of Sputnik V have agreed to supply the Russian anti-Covid vaccine to Delhi but its quantity is yet to be decided.

The goods and services tax (GST) fitment panel, comprising officers from the Centre and some states, has recommended a short-term rate cut on four related items, according to the detailed agenda note for the upcoming Council meeting.

A PIL has urged the Delhi High Court to direct the Centre, Delhi government and municipal corporations to ensure that electric or CNG crematoriums are installed in different parts of the national capital in view of the large number of people succumbing to daily.

A study involving 69 healthcare workers at Delhi's Apollo Hospital, who tested positive for after being vaccinated, found that the B.1.617.2 variant was detected in 48 percent of their samples, according to reports.

Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal said Delhi has reported around 620 cases of black fungus so far and further flagged a shortage of the Amphoterin-B injection to treat it.

India reported 2,08,921 new cases and 4,157 deaths in the last 24 hours. With this the country’s overall caseload has risen to 2,71,57,795, while the death toll is presently at 3,11,388. According to latest data released by the Union Health Ministry, the country’s active caseload has declined to 24.95 lakh.India conducted 22.17 lakh tests on Monday, the highest number of tests conducted in a single day.

Around 600 cases of black fungus have been reported in Delhi so far, with under 100 cases being recorded on 24 and 25 May each. Meanwhile, the Centre said over 1.77 crore vaccine doses are available with states and union territories, and they will receive one lakh more within the next three days.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi said the pandemic is the worst crisis that humanity has faced in decades, adding that vaccines are of utmost importance in the fight against the deadly virus.

The variant first detected in India has now been officially recorded in 53 territories, a World Health Organization report showed.

On a day when India's daily count of cases in the country fell below the 2-lakh mark after over a month, a report by CRISIL suggested that India may be already past the peak of its second wave. India also crossed a major landmark with more than 20 crore cumulative vaccine doses administered so far, however, the overall rate of inoculation remained lower than the previous weeks.

The active caseload has been trending downward for the second week in a row as daily cases declined 22 percent sequentially in the week ended 23 May, which is faster than the 15 percent fall the week before, CRISIL said in its report. This means that the infections may have crossed the peak on 6 May, when the country had reported 4.14 lakh cases. Daily new cases now average 2.5 lakh, down from 3.3 lakh in the week ended 16 May.

Today the country reported 1,96,427 new infections taking the total tally of cases to 2,69,48,874, while the death toll rose to 3,07,231 with 3,511 fresh fatalities, according to the Union Health Ministry data updated on Tuesday.

The daily positivity rate has reduced and now stands at 9.54 percent, while the single-day recoveries continue to outnumber the new cases for the 12th consecutive day, the Union Health Ministry said on Tuesday.

The active caseload has also reduced to 25,86,782 with a net decline of 1,33,934 cases being witnessed in a span of 24 hours. It now accounts for 9.60 percent of the country's total infections. The active cases have decreased since its last peak on 10 May.

Taking together the decline in new infections, positivity rate and active cases, coupled with improving recovery rate, the country may have crossed the peak of the second wave on 6 May, the report said.

However, states like Tamil Nadu, Odisha and Assam are still under a strong viral grip, on the other hand, Uttar Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan have seen the sharpest declines, it added.

With 34,867 cases reported in the past 24 hours, Tamil Nadu is leading the state list. It is followed by Maharashtra with 22,122 new infections. Karnataka reported 25,311 cases, Kerala 17,821 and Andhra Pradesh 12,994 cases. The case count was 17,883 for West Bengal.

The six most affected states by total cases are Maharashtra (5,602,019), Karnataka (2,450,215), Kerala (2,365,787), Tamil Nadu (1,877,211), Uttar Pradesh (1,673,785), and Andhra Pradesh (1,593,821).

The daily vaccination numbers, however, continue on a downward spiral as distribution bottlenecks and vaccine unavailability stop states from ramping up the inoculation drive.

Daily jabs plunge over 35%: CRISIL report

The daily vaccination has come down to 980 per million people as of May 23, down from 1,455 per million a week earlier and against the world average of 3,564 per million, according to a report by CRISIL.

With the vaccine availability remaining a national bottleneck, the pace of vaccination has been steeply falling and as of 23 May,  daily vaccinations have come down to a low of 980 per million people from 1,455 per million a week earlier, down over 35 percent. The world average is 3,564 per million, the report said.

Though Maharashtra, Gujarat, and Delhi have vaccinated the highest proportion of their population among the respective groups, the pace of vaccination has declined further in May in these states.

Vaccination will further slow down as the availability of the vaccine is going to take time.

The CRISIL reports comes on a day when India crossed a major landmark with more than 20 crore cumulative vaccine doses administered so far. A total of 20,04,94,991 vaccine doses have been administered through 28,41,151 sessions, according to a provisional report prepared at 7 pm on Tuesday.

These include 1,28,74,546 beneficiaries of the age group 18-44 years across 37 States/UTs since the start of Phase-3 of the vaccination drive. Bihar, Rajasthan and Uttar Pradesh have administered more than 10 lakh beneficiaries of the age group 18-44 years for their first dose of COVID vaccine. According to the ministry data, 12.82 Lakh vaccination doses were administered in the 18-44 age group in a span of 24 hours.

Moderna unable to supply jabs before 2022; Pfizer wants further relaxation in govt rules

At a time when the global tenders floated by most states to procure vaccine have failed to yield results, reports suggest that the government's plans to procure Moderna and Pfizer shots may still be a distant shot and is unlikely to solve the immediate shortage of jabs.

Moderna is expecting to launch a single-dose vaccine in India only by next year and is in talks with Cipla among other Indian firms, while another US giant Pfizer is ready to offer 5 crore shots in 2021 itself but it wants significant regulatory relaxations including indemnification, sources told PTI on Tuesday.

While Moderna has conveyed to Indian authorities that it does not have surplus vaccines to share in 2021, there are limited prospects of Johnson & Johnson exporting its jabs from the US to other countries in the near future, the sources privy to discussions added.

Two rounds of high-level meetings chaired by the Cabinet Secretary were held last week on the availability of vaccines in the global as well as domestic markets as it was felt that there is an urgent need to procure the jabs at a time the country is reeling under an unprecedented second wave of and a widening gap between supply and requirement.

Currently, the country is using two 'made-in India' jabs, Covishield and Covaxin, to inoculate its billion-plus population and has administered 20 crore doses since launching the world's largest vaccination drive in mid-January. A third vaccine, Russian-made Sputnik V, has been approved by the government and is being used on a smaller scale at present.

According to a source, for the supply of vaccines to India, Pfizer has asked for indemnification from the Government of India and a document in this regard has been received from Pfizer Inc. Further, Pfizer has also sought certain relaxations in the regulatory regime, including relaxation in the requirement of post-approval bridging trials and dispensing the requirement of testing their vaccines in CDL (Central Drugs Laboratory).

As per the information furnished by Pfizer, around 116 countries in the world including the USA have signed the indemnification document.

Further, considering that over 14.7 crore doses of Pfizer had been administered worldwide without any significant reports of adverse effects, a view needs to be taken to indemnify the company in order to supplement the availability of vaccines in India, officials discussed at one recent meeting.

More children infected with COVID, no need for panic but important to vaccinate: experts

More children are testing positive in the second wave but the infection is mostly mild and the mortality rate low, say experts, citing increased testing and enhanced understanding of symptoms as among the possible reasons for the rising graph.

Though there is enough anecdotal evidence of catching children early teens and younger there is little reason to panic, said several doctors and scientists. They also stressed on the urgent need to vaccinate children to stem the spread of the infection.

There is a general increase or shift in infection numbers towards children and younger groups as compared to older people, agreed virologist Upasana Ray.

This could be because the virus had already infected more of the older age groups last year, leading to the development of immunity in those who recovered from various degrees of the infection.

Eventually, this age group was prioritised for getting vaccinated as well which added to the pool of elderly individuals with immunity against this virus, Ray, from Kolkata's CSIR-Indian Institute of Chemical Biology, told PTI.

In Ray's view, in the present surge, the virus is infecting those to whom it has more access due to lack of immunity, that is, younger people. Children account for about 3-4 percent of hospital admissions, in both India and the rest of the world, Niti Aayog (health) member VK Paul said recently.

'Maybe re-look advisory barring repeat of RTPCR on COVID positive patients'

The Delhi High Court on Tuesday suggested to the Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR) that it may need to re-look its recent advisory which said RTPCR must not be repeated on an individual who tested positive by either Rapid Antigen Test (RAT) or RTPCR.

Justice Rekha Palli asked the counsel for ICMR to take instructions on the issue saying "maybe you need to re-look your advisory".

The suggestion by the court came while hearing a plea by a lawyer who has challenged the advisory as due to it, neither he nor his family members could get tested again after spending more than 17 days in quarantine from 28 April when they first tested positive.

The lawyer told the court that without a COVID negative report the civil defense guards outside his residence were not permitting him to go out for even basic essential items and when he tried to get tested at a lab, they declined to test him due to the 4 May advisory of ICMR.

The petitioner has contended that the May 4 advisory was "arbitrary, discriminatory and creates a paradoxical situation since a negative RTPCR report is compulsorily required by several other notifications issued by the respondents (Centre, ICMR and Delhi government)".

He has sought striking down of the clause in the advisory which bars repeating of an RTPCR test on someone who has already tested positive. The petition also seeks directions to the Delhi government to permit testing of the petitioner and his parents.

No home isolation to be allowed in 18 Maharashtra districts with high positivity rate

The Maharashtra government has decided to stop home quarantining of patients in 18 of the total 36 districts of the state which have reported high positivity rates, and all active patients in these areas would be admitted to COVID Care Centers, health minister Rajesh Tope said here on Tuesday.

The districts of Satara, Sindhudurg, Ratnagiri, Osmanabad, Beed, Raigad, Pune, Hingoli, Akola, Amravati, Kolhapur, Thane, Sangli, Gadchiroli, Wardha, Nashik, Ahmednagar and Latur have above-average positivity rates, as per the health department data.

Ordinarily, asymptomatic patients or those who have mild symptoms of infection are advised home isolation.

The state has 3,27,000 active cases and the recovery rate has improved to 93 percent. The case positivity rate -- proportion of positive cases in tested samples -- is around 12 percent while the case fatality rate is 1.5 percent, Tope told reporters here.

But the positivity rate in 18 districts is higher than the state average, he said.

Bharat Biotech expects EUL from WHO for Covaxin in July- September

Bharat Biotech on Tuesday said it expects approval for its vaccine Covaxin from the World Health Organisation for Emergency Use Listing between July and September. The company said regulatory approvals for Covaxin are in process in more than 60 countries, including the USA, Brazil and Hungary, among others.

"Application for EUL has been submitted to WHO-Geneva. Regulatory approvals are expected July-September 2021," it said in a release.

Emergency Use Listing (EUL) is a procedure to streamline the process by which new or unlicensed products can be used during public health emergencies, according to WHO guidelines. The latest 'Status of Vaccines within WHO EUL/PQ evaluation process guidance document dated May 18 on the WHO website said Bharat Biotech submitted EOI (Expression of Interest) on April 19 and that "more information required".

A pre-submission meeting is expected "to be planned May-June 2021," the WHO website said. Sources had earlier indicated that Bharat Biotech International Limited (BBIL) has conveyed to the Centre that it has already submitted 90 percent of documents to WHO for obtaining EUL for Covaxin.

The remaining documents are expected to be submitted by June, the city-based vaccine maker reportedly had told the Central Government during a discussion on obtaining WHOs authorisation for EUL for Covaxin. The city-based vaccine maker said it has got EUA in 13 countries with more to follow.

With inputs from PTI

Updated Date: May 26, 2021 17:24:02 IST

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