Coronavirus Outbreak

Central Teams Recommend Tracing, Containment, Augmented Healthcare Facilities To Overcome Kerala COVID-19 Crisis

The target of the Central team was to specifically look at areas of testing, contact tracing including surveillance and containment, COVID appropriate behaviours, availability of hospital beds, sufficient logistics including ambulances and hospital-wise case fatality analysis and COVID -19 vaccination progress in Kerala

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Highlights
  • The central team recommended RAT testing at an expanded level in Kerala
  • About 44% of the population in Kerala has COVID antibodies: Sero-survey
  • Kerala's 14 districts are reporting over 20,000 COVID-19 cases per day

New Delhi: The Central multi-disciplinary teams that recently visited Kerala to review the COVID-19 situation in the state emphasised the need for enhancing testing, contact tracing, enforcing containment measures and establishment of adequate healthcare infrastructure to overcome the crisis. “Proper hospital infrastructure like ICU and ventilator beds needs to be augmented on an urgent basis. Paediatric Care facilities especially paediatric ICU beds also need to be augmented,” they pointed out. The ANI has accessed a draft report of the Central multi-disciplinary team that reached Kerala on July 30, 2021.

Also Read: Ramp Up COVID Vaccination, Complete Sero-survey, Central Health Team Asks Kerala Government

Kerala’s 14 districts are presently reporting more than 20,000 cases per day and according to May 2021 data, over 80 per cent of circulating strains are Delta variant, the report stated.

It has also been recommended that clusters and super events, whenever suspected or reported should be investigated by District level RRT.

The Central teams visited Kerala as the state continued to grapple with increasing COVID-19 cases. The state continues to report the highest number of coronavirus cases in the country and has registered 13,325 COVID-19 related deaths so far. The target of the Central team was to specifically look at areas of testing, contact tracing including surveillance and containment, COVID appropriate behaviours, availability of hospital beds, sufficient logistics including ambulances and hospital-wise case fatality analysis and COVID -19 vaccination progress.

They also recommended that “RAT testing at an expanded level should be implemented to ensure saturation testing and reduce lag in the report, the re-categorisation exercise should ideally be undertaken every 14 days, vaccination, the system of whole house isolation to break the chain.”

Also Read: COVID-19 In India: The Rise In R-Value Is A Cause Of Concern, Says Dr Randeep Guleria, AIIMS

It was indicated by State officials that due to effective home isolation and containment strategies followed after first wave of CoVID-19, the population remained largely unexposed. This is also suggested by a recently conducted sero-surveillance study by ICMR. In it, Kerala ranked last with only about 44 per cent of the population showing antibodies against CoVID-19, said the report.

According to the report, in Kollam, the Positivity rate is relatively lower in coastal and tribal areas but the bed occupancy rate in the district is quite high with nearly 80 per cent of O2 beds occupied (in government setup). Samples sent for whole-genome sequencing (WGS) was lowest in Kollam among all districts of the State. However, in Thiruvananthapuram as per the report and data shared by the State, as of July 30 with the central team, the number of cases/deaths reported was 331147 and 3229 deaths. The Case Fatality Rate (CFR) of the district was highest at 0.98 per cent. In the Malappuram District, the report stated, “case detection is mainly through testing of those reporting to health facilities with Covid like illness. There is no active surveillance to detect cases.”

Also Read: Kerala Accounts For Nearly 50 Per Cent Of The Fresh COVID-19 Cases Reported In India, Is It A Matter Of Concern?

The contact tracing is abysmally low with a case contact ratio of 1:1.5. This is more so important as the average family size in this district is above 5, implying even the primary contacts are being missed out. This lack of contact tracing results in an undetected pool of asymptomatic/ mildly symptomatic individuals in the community, the report stated.

In Kozhikode District, as per the report, the case detection is mainly through testing of those reporting to health facilities with Covid like illness.

There is no active surveillance to detect cases. The contact tracing is abysmally low with a case contact ratio of 1:1.2. The lack of contact tracing results in an undetected pool of asymptomatic or mildly symptomatic individuals in the community, the report said.

Among those who tested positive, over 85 per cent are in home isolation. In the Kannur district, there are 5998 active cases. The Test Positivity Rate (TPR) is 13.72 per cent (for the week ending 31st July 2021). The case detection is mainly through testing of those reporting to health facilities with Covid like illness. There is no active surveillance to detect cases.

Also Read: Kerala Government Announces Rs. 20,000 Crore COVID Package, Rs. 1,500 Crore For Free Vaccination

The team was divided into Team – 1 for Southern districts of Kerala and Team – 2 for Northern Districts. While Team 1 visited Alappuzha, Kollam, Pathanamthitta, and Thiruvananthapuram districts of Kerala, Team 2 visited Malappuram, Kozhikode, Kannur, and Kasargod districts of the state. The Central teams included the following experts, Dr Sujeet Singh, Director, NCDC, Dr P Ravindran, Former DDG, Dr S. K. Jain, Advisor (PH), NCDC, Dr K. Regu, Addl. Director, Kozhikode Branch, NCDC, Dr Pranay Verma, Joint Director, NCDC, and Dr Ruchi Jain, Public Health Specialist. Kerala on Tuesday recorded 23,676 new COVID-19 cases and 148 deaths.

Also Read: India’s Battle Against COVID-19: How Is The Country Preparing For The Third Wave Of Coronavirus? Experts Explain

(This story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

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