Covid 19 and India

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'' The impact of Covid-19  on the economy in 2020 ''
 
'' The impact of Covid-19  on the economy in 2020 ''
  
[[Category:Health|C COVID 19 AND INDIA
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=India vis-à-vis other countries=
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==2020-mid Jan 2021 ==
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[https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/covid-19-how-india-is-different-among-worst-hit-nations/articleshow/80271345.cms  Armaan Bhatnagar, January 14, 2021: ''The Times of India'']
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[[File: India witnessed just one COVID peak compared to US and UK.jpg|India witnessed just one COVID peak compared to US and UK <br/> From: [https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/covid-19-how-india-is-different-among-worst-hit-nations/articleshow/80271345.cms Armaan Bhatnagar, January 14, 2021: ''The Times of India'']|frame|500px]]
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'''See graphic''':
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'' India witnessed just one COVID peak compared to US and UK ''
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Covid-19: Why India is different among worst-hit nations
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NEW DELHI: Once leading the world in daily case count, India has shown a marked improvement in its coronavirus situation over the last few weeks. From hitting a peak of over 97,000 new cases in a single day last September, the country is now consistently reporting under 20,000 daily cases on an average. And while its battle against coronavirus is far from over, India's Covid-19 graph does stand out when compared to some other badly-hit nations around the world.
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The United States leads the world when it comes to coronavirus infections and deaths. It has been reporting over 2 lakh cases daily for the last few weeks, with the average case count perilously close to its peak of nearly 3 lakh infections.
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Similarly, the situation is also grim in UK, Brazil and Spain, all of which are reporting fresh infections that are close to the peak number.
 +
 
 +
The percent of the peak a country currently reports gives an idea of how far it is from containing the spread of the virus relative to the worst days of its outbreak.
 +
 
 +
In comparison, India's current average daily case count stands at just 18% of its peak. If the declining trend holds, the percentage is expected to go down further.
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 +
''' Lesser deaths, more recoveries '''
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India's current recovery rate is at 96.5%, which is among the highest in the world.
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When it comes to deaths, India has among the lowest case fatality ratio (CFR) vis-a-vis the worst-hit nations. The case fatality ratio is the percentage of deaths compared to the total number of cases.
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India's CFR currently stands at 1.4%. Meanwhile, Mexico has the highest CFR at 8.7%, way above others.
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''' Lowest cases per million '''
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India's Covid-19 situation can also be understood through its average case count per million.
 +
 
 +
Despite being a densely populated nation, India has been reporting just over 7,500 cases per million people. The number is almost 1/10th compared to the US, which is averaging over 71,000 cases per million people.
 +
 
 +
And while India's overall testing rate is lower compared to other nations, there has not been a major decline in testing since the peak in September. India was testing an average of 1 million people in the months of September and October, and the figures have now come down to 8 lakh per day. However, the proportionate fall in cases is much higher, indicating that the situation has been brought under control.
 +
 
 +
 
 +
''' No more peaks? '''
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 +
For long, experts were divided over whether India would witness another Covid wave after September.
 +
 
 +
But in December last year, several experts suggested that India may not witness another peak at all. They said that even if India does hit a new peak, it won't be as bad as the first one.
 +
 
 +
This is evident from the constant decline in the cases, or the flattening of the curve, over the last few months.
 +
 
 +
Meanwhile, countries like the UK and US continue to report record highs, with each peak worse than the previous one.
 +
 
 +
Both countries have already hit their third peak, with the virus showing no signs of abating.
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[[Category:Health|C COVID 19 AND INDIACOVID 19 AND INDIA
 
COVID 19 AND INDIA]]
 
COVID 19 AND INDIA]]
[[Category:India|C COVID 19 AND INDIA
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[[Category:India|C COVID 19 AND INDIACOVID 19 AND INDIA
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COVID 19 AND INDIA]]
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[[Category:Pages with broken file links|COVID 19 AND INDIA
 
COVID 19 AND INDIA]]
 
COVID 19 AND INDIA]]
[[Category:Pages with broken file links|COVID 19 AND INDIA]]
 

Revision as of 06:59, 20 January 2021

This is a collection of articles archived for the excellence of their content.
Additional information may please be sent as messages to the Facebook
community, Indpaedia.com. All information used will be gratefully
acknowledged in your name.



Contents

An overview

2020

December 25, 2020: The Times of India

Covid 19 in India, Jan to Dec 23, 2020, a state-wise overview
From: December 25, 2020: The Times of India

11 months of ups and downs in India’s battle against Covid

The peaks of 90,000+ daily cases appear far behind now, but as the new year beckons, India has a wary eye open for a new strain. Atul Thakur charts the course of the virus since the first case in January

India reported its first Covid-19 case on January 30 when an Indian student in Wuhan tested positive upon her return to Kerala. Through February, though, India added only two more cases, taking the country's cumulative total to three cases and zero deaths.

The coronavirus’ real onslaught began in March — within the first 10 days, many large states began reporting cases. Delhi, Rajasthan and Telangana reported their first cases on March 2, followed by Haryana and Uttar Pradesh on March 4. Separated by thousands of kilometres both Tamil Nadu and Ladakh reported their first case on March 7. On March 9, Jammu & Kashmir, Karnataka, Maharashtra and Punjab reported positive cases. By March-end, 27 of the 36 states and UTs had reported positive cases. India also saw its first Covid-19 deaths on March 13, when both Delhi and Karnataka reported their first fatalities. By the end of the month, 13 states had witnessed Covid deaths.

Indians spent most of April under one of the world’s strictest lockdowns, but cases kept crawling up. From little over a thousand, India’s cumulative Covid case count went up to over 33,000 by April-end. The death toll also crossed the 1,000-mark in April. By the end of the month, Sikkim, Nagaland, Dadra and Nagar Haveli, Daman and Diu and Lakshadweep were the only ones yet to report cases.

Cases breached the one-lakh threshold in May. The month also saw cumulative deaths cross the 5,000-mark. But even by the end of the month, 12 states and UTs, including Ladakh, Tripura, Puducherry, Goa, Arunachal Pradesh, Nagaland, Sikkim, Manipur and Mizoram were yet to report their first deaths.

But Covid unleashed its full force during the first phase of unlocking in June and cases raced from 1.8 lakh to 5.6 lakh over the course of the month. Cumulative deaths, too, rose from 5,164 on May 31 to 16,893 on June 30. The rapid increase in both cases and deaths continued in July and August. From over 5 lakh by June-end, cases rose to more than 35 lakh by the end of August.

The silver lining was that the otherwise grim months of July and August showed a glimpse of what lay beyond the peak of cases. Tamil Nadu was the first state to peak. The daily average of new cases touched 6,803 on July 30 and hasn’t crossed that mark again. Bihar also saw its highest daily case tally on August 15.

Eighteen states and UTs reported their maximum daily average of cases in September. Among the larger states, Andhra Pradesh saw its peak at 10,500 cases on September 2. Other major states like Maharashtra (22,149), UP (6,581), Odisha (4,272), Chhattisgarh (3,282), Assam (2,875), Telangana (2,718), Punjab (2,639), Haryana (2,566), and MP (2,523) reached their peak daily cases in September. India reached its peak on September 17, when the daily average touched 93,199 cases.

There has been a steady decline in daily cases since September, and by October-end it appeared that 29 states and UTs were past their peaks.

The daily average of cases is over 5,000 for Kerala and more than 2,000 for Maharashtra and West Bengal now. The average ranges between 1,000 and 2,000 for Chhattisgarh, UP, Delhi, Karnataka, Tamil Nadu, MP, Gujarat and Rajasthan. Judging from the overall trends since September, it seems that the worst is over.

A timeline

Shuja Asrar, January 1, 2021: The Times of India

September recorded the highest number of cases, February- December 2020
From: Shuja Asrar, January 1, 2021: The Times of India

Coronavirus calendar: How the Covid pandemic unfolded across India in 2020

NEW DELHI: More than 82 million cases, over 1.8 million deaths, a record slump in the economy, loss of livelihoods of millions, lockdown that confined billions of people inside their houses — the coronavirus pandemic has exposed vulnerabilities and tested resilience of humans in 2020.

In India, the virus has so far infected 10.2 million people and claimed the lives of over 148,000 people. The month of September witnessed the most catastrophic phase of the pandemic when over 2.6 million cases were confirmed.

We look at how the pandemic spread across the country since the detection of the first case on January 30.


January (cases:1 | deaths:0)

30 First case confirmed in Kerala's Thrissur

31 WHO declares the coronavirus a Global Emergency of International Concern


February (cases:3 | deaths:0)

2 Second case reported in Kerala's Alappuzha

3 Third case reported in Kerala's Kasaragod

11 WHO names new coronavirus SARS-CoV-2 and disease caused by it Covid-19

27 A total 759 Indians and 43 foreigners airlifted from Wuhan


March (cases:1,397 | deaths:35)

6 Screening of international arrivals in India

11 WHO declared Covid-19 a pandemic

12 First confirmed death in India. Stock markets crash — BSE SENSEX dropped 8.18%,NIFTY dropped 9%

14 Indian scientists isolated a strain of the novel coronavirus

17 Govt allowed private pathology labs to test for Covid-19

22 One-day janta curfew imposed. Passenger air and train travel suspended

23 Hydroxychloroquine recommended for the treatment of high-risk cases.

25 Lockdown imposed till March 25. All domestic flights suspended

26 Exodus of migrants begin. The government announced an economic relief package of ₹1.7 lakh crore

28 1,000 confirmed cases. PM CARES Fund set up


April (cases:34,863 | deaths:1,154)

14 10,000 cases confirmed. Nationwide lockdown extended till May 3.

16 IPL suspended indefinitely

20 First recovery through plasma therapy


May (cases:190,609 | deaths:5408)

1 Nationwide lockdown extended till May 17

3 5,000 deaths confirmed

4 Liquor shops reopen across the country

7 Phase 1 of Vande Bharat mission begins. 50,000 confirmed cases reported in India.

9 ICMR announces tie up with Bharat Biotech to develop indigenous vaccine for Covid-19

12 PM Narendra Modi announces Rs 20 lakh crore Atmanirbhar package

17 Nationwide lockdown extended till May 31

19 100,000 cases confirmed


June (cases:585,481 | deaths: 17,400)

1 Govt announced guidelines for Unlock 1

10 Recoveries exceed active cases for the first time

12 India overtook UK to become 4th worst-hit coronavirus country


July (cases:1,695,988 | deaths:36511)

1 Govt announces guidelines for Unlock 2.0

6 India overtakes Russia to become third worst-hit country

15 Phase-1 clinical trials of India’s first indigenous Covid-19 vaccine, Covaxin

25 BCCI announces IPL to be held in UAE from September 19

29 Govt announces guidelines for Unlock 3.0


August (cases:3,691,166 | deaths:65,288)

3 Serum Institute of India got approval from DCGI for trial phases II & III

26 Serum Institute of India starts India trials of Covishield

29 Centre issues Unlock 4.0 guidelines

31 India's GDP contracts 23.9% in April-June quarter


September (cases:6,312,584 | deaths:98,678)

7 India became second worst-affected country after the US

22 India reported over 1 lakh coronavirus recoveries in a single-day for the first time

28 Global death count crossed one million

30 Government issued Unlock 5.0 guidelines


October (cases:8,184,082 | deaths:122,111)

5 Govt said 20-25 cr people to be vaccinated by July 25

26 Govt asked state to prepare 3-tier system for vaccine rollout

28 Voting for phase 1 of Bihar assembly elections


November (cases:9,462,809 | deaths:137,621)

5 Govt said 20-25 cr people to be vaccinated by July 25

26 Govt asked state to prepare 3-tier system for vaccine rollout

28 Voting for phase 1 of Bihar assembly elections

9 Pfizer and BioNtech said vaccine candidate more than 90% effective

10 Delhi in midst of third wave

28 Vaccine trial paricipant demand Rs 5 cr in damages


December (cases:10,244,852 | deaths:148,439)

1 Farmers protests erupt across country

21 India bans flights from UK

29 Six arrivals from UK tested positive for new strain

30 Several cities impose night curfew

Economy, impact on

2020

The impact of Covid-19 on the economy in 2020
From: January 12, 2021: The Times of India

See graphic:

The impact of Covid-19 on the economy in 2020

India vis-à-vis other countries

2020-mid Jan 2021

Armaan Bhatnagar, January 14, 2021: The Times of India

India witnessed just one COVID peak compared to US and UK
From: Armaan Bhatnagar, January 14, 2021: The Times of India

See graphic:

India witnessed just one COVID peak compared to US and UK


Covid-19: Why India is different among worst-hit nations

NEW DELHI: Once leading the world in daily case count, India has shown a marked improvement in its coronavirus situation over the last few weeks. From hitting a peak of over 97,000 new cases in a single day last September, the country is now consistently reporting under 20,000 daily cases on an average. And while its battle against coronavirus is far from over, India's Covid-19 graph does stand out when compared to some other badly-hit nations around the world.

The United States leads the world when it comes to coronavirus infections and deaths. It has been reporting over 2 lakh cases daily for the last few weeks, with the average case count perilously close to its peak of nearly 3 lakh infections.

Similarly, the situation is also grim in UK, Brazil and Spain, all of which are reporting fresh infections that are close to the peak number.

The percent of the peak a country currently reports gives an idea of how far it is from containing the spread of the virus relative to the worst days of its outbreak.

In comparison, India's current average daily case count stands at just 18% of its peak. If the declining trend holds, the percentage is expected to go down further.

Lesser deaths, more recoveries

India's current recovery rate is at 96.5%, which is among the highest in the world.

When it comes to deaths, India has among the lowest case fatality ratio (CFR) vis-a-vis the worst-hit nations. The case fatality ratio is the percentage of deaths compared to the total number of cases.

India's CFR currently stands at 1.4%. Meanwhile, Mexico has the highest CFR at 8.7%, way above others.

Lowest cases per million

India's Covid-19 situation can also be understood through its average case count per million.

Despite being a densely populated nation, India has been reporting just over 7,500 cases per million people. The number is almost 1/10th compared to the US, which is averaging over 71,000 cases per million people.

And while India's overall testing rate is lower compared to other nations, there has not been a major decline in testing since the peak in September. India was testing an average of 1 million people in the months of September and October, and the figures have now come down to 8 lakh per day. However, the proportionate fall in cases is much higher, indicating that the situation has been brought under control.


No more peaks?

For long, experts were divided over whether India would witness another Covid wave after September.

But in December last year, several experts suggested that India may not witness another peak at all. They said that even if India does hit a new peak, it won't be as bad as the first one.

This is evident from the constant decline in the cases, or the flattening of the curve, over the last few months.

Meanwhile, countries like the UK and US continue to report record highs, with each peak worse than the previous one.

Both countries have already hit their third peak, with the virus showing no signs of abating.

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