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Saturday, March 28, 2020

Karnataka's Indira Canteens to serve free meals for poor, govt offers home delivery

Coronavirus
The number of food packets per Indira Canteen will depend upon how many such canteens are present in each Assembly constituency.
Indira Canteens in Karnataka, which were earlier providing subsidised food, are now giving parceled food for free to people from low income backgrounds, including daily-wage workers and the poor. People can either go to the Indira Canteens or have the food delivered directly to their homes.  According to the Minister for Medical Education, Dr K Sudhakar, people can call the Health Department’s helpline numbers and they will be directed to the nearest Indira Canteen. If they are unable to go to the canteen, the free food packets will be delivered directly to their homes.  He said that the civil defence personnel and the volunteers who have signed up, will deliver the meals to people’s homes.  Food will be prepared in 16 centralised kitchens in Bengaluru and divided into individual packets. The district administrations and local bodies of other municipal corporations will have to deicde on how many kitchens will be open. These packets will be transported to the various Indira Canteens. People going to the canteens will have to maintain 1m distance between each other. The packets will be delivered to them by personnel who will be wearing gloves and a mask. Hand wash facilities will be provided at every canteen serving food.  Breakfast will be served between 7.30 and 10 am. Lunch will be served between 12.30 and 3 pm and dinner will be served between 7.30 and 9 pm. According to the Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike (BBMP), the number of food packets per Indira Canteen will depend upon how many such canteens are present in each Assembly constituency. “It will also depend on the average footfalls at each canteen. We have the data for this,” a BBMP official said.  In case the food packets are over, people can call the helpline and give them their home address. The food will be delivered to them. “This free food delivery is only for people from low income backgrounds and the poor,” the BBMP official added.  However, free ration is also being provided for Below Poverty Line (BPL) cardholders at the designated public distribution centres. Several migrant labourers from North Karnataka have been walking home due to lack of groceries and food. BBMP officials said that this move was to ensure that people stay at home. India will be under lockdown until April 14. Only essential services are currently available and people are not allowed to step out of their homes except for buying essentials.       
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Five contacts of COVID-19 patient from Karnataka test positive

Coronavirus
The patient had travel history to Saudi Arabia and was tested positive on March 21.
Representation photo
Five people that a COVID-19 positive patient from Chikkaballapura came into contact with, tested positive for coronavirus on Saturday.  The man, aged 31 years, is a resident of Gauribidanur in Chikkaballapura. He had returned to his hometown on March 14 after travelling to Mecca. He developed symptoms of COVID-19 on March 19 and was shifted to a hospital in Bengaluru, where he was kept under isolation ever since. He and his 64-year-old mother were tested positive for coronavirus on March 21.  The Health Department kept several of the man’s contacts under home isolation and five of them have now tested positive. These patients include a 23-year-old man from Hindupur in Andhra Pradesh, a 70-year-old man, a 32-year-old woman and a 38-year-old man from -- all from Chikkaballapura and an 18-year-old man from Hinudpur.  All five patients have been isolated at a hospital in Chikkaballapura.   Other cases in Karnataka Three family members of a COVID-19 positive patient from Uttara Kannada also tested positive for COVID-19 on Saturday.  In addition, a 21-year-old man tested positive on Saturday. He is the son of the 51-year-old man, who returned to Bengaluru from London on March 17. The father was tested positive on March 22. On March 24, the 45-year-old security guard of the man was also tested positive for Coronavirus.  The tenth COVID positive case reported on Saturday was of a 63-year-old woman who returned to Bengaluru from London on March 16. With ten new positive cases in one day, the state’s total tally is now 74.  The entire state is under a lockdown till April 15. Essential services are currently available and ecommerce websites like Big Basket, Amazon and food delivery apps like Swiggy and Dunzo are allowed contact-less delivery. Schools and colleges have been shut and all offices have been asked to ensure their employees work from home. The Centre has announced a Rs 15,000 crore healthcare package to help fight the disease in India, while the state has approved Rs 200 crore for the same.   
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These Bengaluru residents are making sure strays don’t go hungry amid the lockdown

Coronavirus
Around 190 residents across Bengaluru have taken the initiative to purchase food for these stray dogs and are taking time off every day to feed them.
Representation photo
We have all seen stray dogs near food stalls, grocery stores and smaller eateries as these are the places they try to get food from. In cities like Bengaluru, there are animal rescuers and concerned individuals, who would feed the stray dogs. But with the entire country under lockdown in the wake of the coronavirus pandemic, some of these regular feeders are braving the odds to make trips across their localities every day and feed the strays, who face the threat of starvation.  Around 190 residents across Bengaluru have taken the initiative to purchase food for these stray dogs and are taking time off every day to feed them. Vikas Bafan, a distributor for Red Bull, feeds around 50-60 dogs twice a day in and around Frazer Town.  Vikas spends around Rs 1,500 - 2,000 per day to buy supplies to feed the dogs in his locality. “I raise funds by asking friends and family for donations. I raise around Rs 30,000 per month and use it for supplies,” Vikas says.  He buys rice, curd and biscuits for the stray dogs near his house. He leaves home in his Maruti Omni with his sister Suman at around 7.30 am every day and stop by when they see the dogs and feed one packet of biscuit to each dog.  “I go around St Francis Xavier’s Church, Coles Park, Ulsoor, RBMS Grounds and the surrounding areas. In the mornings, I give them biscuits. In the night at around 8.30 pm, I feed them curd rice,” Vikas says, while adding that he was initially stopped by the police on the first day of the lockdown. But when he showed  them the food and said he was a feeder, he was allowed to proceed.  “I don’t stop for long. If people in the area object to it, I take the dogs to a secluded spot and feed them and then bring them back to where they were,” Vikas says.  Vikas and other dog feeders in the city have created a WhatsApp group. If dogs in a certain area require food, then feeders who are closest to the location of the dogs go and feed them.  Like Vikas, Jaswanth, a techie employed with Accenture in Bengaluru, feeds around 70-80 dogs along with another animal rescuer Reshma in and around Madiwala, Silk Board and BTM Layout.  Jaswanth feeds the dogs in his area once in a day and spends around Rs 5,000 to 6,000 per month for food supplies. He pays out of his own pocket. Every night after work, he sets off on foot with the bag of food and feeds every stray in the area. “I feed them boiled chicken and boiled eggs. We get pet food at meat shops that are cheaper and dogs love chicken,” he says.  Jaswant, who is from Andhra Pradesh’s Dharmavaram, came to the city four years ago after he got a job. He started rescuing stray dogs and feeding them over a year ago.  “Initially, the police would stop me and ask why I am walking around. It’s understandable that they are doing their job but to be on the safer side, I got a pass from the Koramangala DCP’s office. I start from my house, then walk up to Silk Board and then towards the Ayyappa Temple in Madiwala and later BTM Layout. Since there is a lockdown, even the strays must not go hungry,” he adds.  Commissioner of Police Bhaskar Rao (9480801001) is helping those who want to feed stray animals. On March 26, Maneka Gandhi issued a statement that all animal welfare workers could feed animals during the lockdown period, TNM had earlier reported. The Animal Welfare Board of India had issued a letter, which could be shown to law enforcement personnel, in case they were stopped. 
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Three family members of Uttara Kannada man with COVID-19 test positive

Coronavirus
The man reached Mumbai from Dubai on March 18 and subsequently traveled to Uttara Kannada by train.
The family of a 65-year-old man from Karnataka’s Uttara Kannada district, who returned to India from Dubai on March 18, have tested positive for coronavirus infection on Saturday.  The state’s Health Department said that the wife of the man, a 54-year-old woman, his two daughters aged 28 and 23 years have COVID-19. The man had traveled to Dubai and had landed at the airport in Mumbai on March 18. He later boarded a train from Mumbai to Uttara Kannada district and was under home isolation. He was tested positive for coronavirus infection on March 24. At the time of writing, the Health Department had not mentioned the train number, in which the 65-year-old man traveled.  All the four family members are admitted to a hospital in Uttara Kannada district.  On Saturday the Karnataka Health Department announced 10 more positive cases of coronavirus, taking the state’s total number of positive cases to 74.  The total number of deaths due to COVID-19 in the state are three. The first was a 76-year-old man from Kalaburagi, who died on March 10 and was tested positive on March 12. The second death was reported in Bengaluru after a 75-year-old woman from Andhra Pradesh passed away in Bengaluru. She too was tested positive after her death. The third was a 65-year-old man from Tumakuru with no travel history abroad. He died on Friday morning. His test results came back positive after his death.  The entire state is under a lockdown till April 15. Essential services are currently available and ecommerce websites like Big Basket, Amazon and food delivery apps like Swiggy and Dunzo are allowed contact-less delivery. Schools and colleges have been shut and all offices have been asked to ensure their employees work from home. The Centre has announced a Rs 15,000 crore healthcare package to help fight the disease in India, while the state has approved Rs 200 crore for the same.   
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Bengaluru’s thalassemia patients struggle with blood, medicine shortage amid lockdown

Coronavirus
With no blood donation drives and camps in the last fortnight, thalassemia patients in the city have to arrange for their own blood donors.
Image for representation
Namitha, a thalassemia patient in Bengaluru, is glad that she was able to arrange for her own blood donor on March 23, before the nationwide 21-day lockdown, and undergo the transfusion patients like her need every fortnight. Others like her, she says, are less fortunate. “Due to social distancing protocols, there have been no blood donation camps in the city in the last two weeks. The blood banks are running very low, and so, they are asking us to arrange our own blood donors if we want to undergo transfusion. While I was able to get done with mine, there were some others whose donors were stopped by the police on Monday and Tuesday, and prevented from going to the blood banks,” alleges Namitha, who is the head of advocacy at city-based Open Platform for Orphan Diseases, a non-profit which is mainly for people with haematological disorders. Thalassemia is a hereditary blood disorder which prevents one’s body from making enough haemoglobin. This results in a large number of oxygen-carrying red blood cells being destroyed, causing anaemia. The patients have to keep undergoing blood transfusions, or get a bone marrow transplant – an option which is neither viable nor accessible for many. The 21-day lockdown to contain the COVID-19 pandemic has thrown life out of gear for many, but for those with chronic illnesses such as thalassemia, it could potentially be life-threatening. Shortage of blood Dr Narasimha Swamy L, the medical officer in-charge at Rotary TTK Blood Bank in Bengaluru, says that while they could earlier supply to around 27 storage centres on a weekly basis, and give 20-30% of their monthly collections to government hospitals, they are now unable to sustain that. Their collection of around 3000 units of blood monthly has now fallen to around 500-600 in the month of March. “Earlier, we didn’t refuse anyone. One could just walk in and get a transfusion. But because of the situation we are in, we have to ask for replacement. So, when thalassemia patients need a transfusion, we are compelled to ask them to bring a donor because we are scarcely stocked,” Dr Swamy tells TNM. Gagandeep Singh Chandok, the president of the Thalassemia and Sickle Cell Society of Bengaluru, says that this is the case with most blood banks in the city. “We are getting calls from patients who are not getting blood for their transfusion. Hospitals and blood banks are shutting down their transfusion centres because of the shortage. And the priority for blood banks right now is to provide blood for those undergoing surgery. While that’s understandable, we are in a difficult position because of this.” Unavailability of life-saving medication Gagandeep says that there are life-saving iron chelation medications they require – tablets, and an injectable. Novartis manufactures both – the drugs are called Asunra and Desferal respectively. Now, they are either unavailable or running out in the city. Namitha explains that under the government’s National Health Mission Blood Cell, a program was set up to provide these medications at certain hospitals in Bengaluru like the Indira Gandhi Hospital, Vanivilas Hospital, Sir CV Raman Nagar General Hospital and KC General Hospital. “However, the state government had to renew the tender for the same for Novartis, a pharmaceutical company that was supposed to provide Desferal. But because of the lockdown, that has not been done, and this medication is now running out at the hospitals, and even finished at most of the places,” says Gagandeep. Additionally, the police, at the beginning of the week, forced Novartis’s retail outlets to down its shutters. “Desferal comes in a set of 10 vials, and we can only collect it from a designated hospital pharmacy or from the Novartis retail outlets. It’s not available elsewhere. Some patients have to take it 4-5 times in a week. And now this is not available,” Gagandeep rues. Namitha and Gagandeep say that these medications are costly, and it is not possible for everyone to stock up on them for months together – which makes the difficulty in accessing them as well as their shortage a life-threatening situation for those living with thalassemia. However, an executive of Novartis said that things are slowly coming back to normal with the retail outlets, and that they will be allowed to remain open. Appeal to the authorities On March 25, Gagandeep sent an email to the Health Minister of Karnataka highlighting these problems. An email was sent to the Commissioner of Police as well, requesting police personnel to not stop the donors from traveling to blood banks and allowing retail outlets like Novartis and Cipla to remain open. However, they have not received a response so far. In their capacity, the blood banks have started issuing letters which can be sent to donors and thalassemia patients explaining why they need to venture out and come to the blood bank. However, the fear of being stopped and questioned may still stop many from coming to donate blood, thalassemia patients say. “We want the government to replenish the medication we need at hospitals, and for the hospitals to put in a protocol that will allow us to buy these medications quickly. In some hospitals, the procedure and waiting time is over an hour. We also want for Novartis and Cipla to be allowed to deliver the required medication to our homes. Asking a person with a vulnerable health condition to go and collect medicines, or waiting at the hospital, will increase the risk of them being exposed to the novel coronavirus also,” Gagandeep says. The patients are also appealing to the government to encourage people to safely donate blood. “All blood banks have put in safety and distancing measures for donors to safely donate blood in their premises. Blood banks like Rotary TTK blood bank are NABL (National Accreditation Board for Testing and Calibration Laboratories) certified and follow the highest standard of hygiene in their premises, for staff, donors and patients. Plus we now have additional questionnaire check, fever check and clinical examination of each donor before donation,” the letter to the Health Minister said. “It is our most humble request to you to consider issuing a Public Appeal through print and electronic media, to motivate and guide people for donating blood for the survival of thalassemics who have no other alternative to blood,” it added. 
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Hundreds of AP natives attempt to enter state from Karnataka, sent to quarantine

Coronavirus
Around 1,300 workers belonging to Andhra, who were trying to cross the border from Kolar to Chittoor, have been sent to a quarantine facility in Kolar.
Image for representation/PTI
More than 1,300 people tried to return to their hometowns in Andhra Pradesh from their workplaces in Karnataka on Friday by crossing the state border from Kolar to Chittoor district. Chittoor district officials reportedly reached the location and appealed to people to remain where they are, in view of the lockdown.  The Hindu reported that the workers, many of them working in coastal Karnataka, had hired a fleet of private vehicles to reach the border. The 1,334 workers from Andhra headed to the border after obtaining passes from the Deputy Director of Fisheries in Mangalore, but tension prevailed as they were stopped from entering Andhra.  According to Times of India, the people were stopped at the Nangili toll plaza from crossing over to Andhra, as both states’ borders are closed. Chittoor district collector, Narayana Bharat Gupta and Superintendent of Police (SP), S Senthil Kumar reportedly coordinated with their Karnataka counterparts to make arrangements for the workers’ quarantine. While the Kolar district officials raised concerns over the availability of doctors and medical facilities for observation and screening of a large number of people, the Andhra government has reportedly extended support to transport the workers to a quarantine facility in Kolar district and sent in a medical team of around 30 doctors and health workers.   According to Andhra Pradesh government sources, a majority of the workers belong to Nellore, Srikakulam, Prakasam and Visakhapatnam districts, while a few of them also belong to Guntur, Vizianagaram, East Godavari and Odisha.  A similar situation was seen earlier on Wednesday along the Andhra-Telangana border as well, where Andhra Pradesh took in a few people and placed them under quarantine, after they were stranded for a long time. Many people had obtained permits to travel from Hyderabad to various towns in Andhra Pradesh. After these incidents, Chief Minister Jagan Mohan Reddy has appealed to people of Andhra to remain wherever they are during the lockdown period, and to reach out to local governments for support regarding food and shelter.  Meanwhile, the Andhra Pradesh High Court while hearing a petition on the issue, has directed that people must be allowed into the state after proper medical examination and obtaining an undertaking that they would remain quarantined. The court also directed authorities to avoid large gatherings at the state borders, and to treat women and children in a humane manner. 
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31 ‘fever clinics’ to come up across Bengaluru for COVID-19 screening

Coronavirus
Each assembly constituency will have at least one such clinic, BBMP Chief Health Officer Dr Vijayendra said.
Representation photo
In the wake of the coronavirus pandemic, 31 fever testing centres spread across Bengaluru will be up and running where primary screening for COVID-19 can be done. The Karnataka Health and Family Welfare Department said that in these centres, patients can visit where they can get tested if their fever is due to a normal flu or if they need to be tested for the novel coronavirus. These 31 ‘fever clinics’ will be functional 24x7 with one doctor officiating each clinic.  In the coming days, there will be similar clinics set up in all the vulnerable districts in the state. In these clinics, people who have been identified as secondary contacts of persons who have already tested positive, can get themselves checked and also if they fear they have contracted the disease following their return from a foreign country. Within the coming two weeks, Karnataka Minister of Medical Education, Dr Sudhakar said they can test more than 25,000-30,000 people who are showing signs of contracting the viral disease. Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike (BBMP) Chief Health Officer Dr Vijayendra is the nodal officer for these clinics. “This plan has been drawn so that there is at least one hospital in each assembly constituency in the city. Anybody who is complaining of fever can head to these clinics where we will assess the symptoms and if we see there is a need, we will test them for COVID-19,” Dr Vijayendra told TNM. He added, “We are not keenly looking at the number of tests but how many people we can treat. People with prominent symptoms will be shifted to designated hospitals for further observation.” Bengaluru city has 28 assembly constituencies in total.   As of date, the number of COVID-19 patients in Karnataka has risen to 62 including three patients who died from co-morbidities.
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