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Friday, May 1, 2020

Now, up to Rs 2000 fine if you don’t wear masks in public places in Bengaluru

Coronavirus
Besides, the BBMP will also fine all those who do not dispose medical waste properly and those who urinate or spit in public places.
Commissioner Anil Kumar
File image
The Karnataka government, while mulling over the easing of restrictions, is looking at how to avoid an increase in the number of coronavirus cases when the lockdown is lifted. Thus, it has asked people to follow basic guidelines and precautions, and has made wearing of masks in public places compulsory. Bengaluru’s civic body, the Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike (BBMP) has put out an order to fine all those who step out without the basic precaution of wearing a face mask, those who spit in public, and those who don't segregate medical waste. Bengaluru Urban district, which comes within BBMP limits, has been classified as one of the three red zones for COVID-19 cases in the state, besides Mysuru and Bengaluru Rural districts. “As Bengaluru is considered a red zone, (we put out an) order by (the) Commissioner, BBMP on compulsory wearing of facial masks in public places, work spaces, proper disposal of such masks, ban on spitting, urinating & littering,” an official said. According to the order, “Wearing of Facial Mask to cover mouth and nose is compulsory in public places and in any working space, (and) facial masks and gloves used by any of the Households (HHs) and Commercial Establishments (CEs) should be properly handed over to Waste Collectors in covers or closed bags as part of Sanitary (Reject) waste.” Additionally, the order states that “Spitting, Urinating, Littering & any kind of related public nuisance is banned and will be considered as public offence.” The order further states that 138 positive cases of COVID-19 have been identified until April 30 in the jurisdiction of BBMP and it is necessary for BBMP to take appropriate actions and enforce precautionary guidelines in public interest. The BBMP also noted in its order that “maintaining social distancing, wearing facial mask and adopting proper segregated waste disposal and sanitation could help contain the spread of coronavirus.” The penalty for stepping out without a face mask for the first time is Rs 1000, while there is a penalty of Rs 2000 for a second-time offender. Additionally, the police are empowered to book nuisance-makers for a public offence under Sections 188 (Disobedience to order duly promulgated by public servant), 269 (Negligent act likely to spread infection of disease dangerous to life) and 270 (Malignant act likely to spread infection of disease dangerous to life) of the Indian Penal Code.
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Fingertip pulse oximeters made mandatory for fever clinics in Karnataka

Controversy
The device is a non-invasive tool through which medical practitioners can measure pulse rate and oxygen percentage in blood coming from the heart.
Patient being screened in a fever clinic in Bengaluru
The Karnataka government has decided to make fingertip pulse oximeters mandatory for all fever clinics in the state, which have been introduced as primary screening centres for COVID-19. Further all SARI (Severe Acute Respiratory Illness) and ILI (influenza like Illness) patients who have a blood oxygen saturation level less than 95% have been asked to be tested for infection as part of the same order. The device is a non-invasive tool through which medical practitioners can measure pulse rate and oxygen percentage in blood coming from the heart. The fever clinics were introduced by the state government, starting with Bengaluru, as the first step of screening for COVID-19. Anyone who has fever or flu-like symptoms is asked to get tested in these clinics. If doctors feel that a patient has a chance of infection, patients are sent to institutional quarantine centres where they are tested.  They are allowed to return home once test results come back negative, or are sent to hospitals if they are found to be infected.  Speaking with TNM, Dr Vijayendra, Chief Health Officer, Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike, said all these 31 clinics in Bengaluru are already equipped with the devices. Read: Bengaluru has 31 fever clinics now: What this means for you In an order issued by Health and Family Welfare Services Director Dr Om Prakash Patil on Thursday it has been said, “It has come to the notice of the State that fingertip pulse oximeter is a much essential tool for stratification of ILI and SARI, and must be made available at all the fever clinics.  All the ILI and SARI cases with spo2 <95% should be subjected for COVID-19 swab test. The screening for fever is being done by infrared thermometers which have to be held within 10 inches from the body surface for appropriate measuring of temperature (appropriate fever screening tool in current outbreak scenario).” It added, “The District Health officers (DHOs) are hereby instructed to ensure availability of fingertip Pulse oximeter and IR Thermal scanners at every fever clinic of the district.”   The order further said the DHOs should ensure that these devices are there in the fever clinics in their respective districts and they can be bought using District Disaster Management Funds or from Karnataka State Drugs Logistics and Warehousing Society. 
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Fingertip pulse oximeters made mandatory for fever clinics in Karnataka

Controversy
The device is a non-invasive tool through which medical practitioners can measure pulse rate and oxygen percentage in blood coming from the heart.
Patient being screened in a fever clinic in Bengaluru
The Karnataka government has decided to make fingertip pulse oximeters mandatory for all fever clinics in the state, which have been introduced as primary screening centres for COVID-19. Further all SARI (Severe Acute Respiratory Illness) and ILI (influenza like Illness) patients who have a blood oxygen saturation level less than 95% have been asked to be tested for infection as part of the same order. The device is a non-invasive tool through which medical practitioners can measure pulse rate and oxygen percentage in blood coming from the heart. The fever clinics were introduced by the state government, starting with Bengaluru, as the first step of screening for COVID-19. Anyone who has fever or flu-like symptoms is asked to get tested in these clinics. If doctors feel that a patient has a chance of infection, patients are sent to institutional quarantine centres where they are tested.  They are allowed to return home once test results come back negative, or are sent to hospitals if they are found to be infected.  Speaking with TNM, Dr Vijayendra, Chief Health Officer, Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike, said all these 31 clinics in Bengaluru are already equipped with the devices. Read: Bengaluru has 31 fever clinics now: What this means for you In an order issued by Health and Family Welfare Services Director Dr Om Prakash Patil on Thursday it has been said, “It has come to the notice of the State that fingertip pulse oximeter is a much essential tool for stratification of ILI and SARI, and must be made available at all the fever clinics.  All the ILI and SARI cases with spo2 <95% should be subjected for COVID-19 swab test. The screening for fever is being done by infrared thermometers which have to be held within 10 inches from the body surface for appropriate measuring of temperature (appropriate fever screening tool in current outbreak scenario).” It added, “The District Health officers (DHOs) are hereby instructed to ensure availability of fingertip Pulse oximeter and IR Thermal scanners at every fever clinic of the district.”   The order further said the DHOs should ensure that these devices are there in the fever clinics in their respective districts and they can be bought using District Disaster Management Funds or from Karnataka State Drugs Logistics and Warehousing Society. 
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Why the education system must understand that many adolescents want skills to work

Labour
With successive governments failing to recognise working children between the ages of 14 and 18 years, they do not get adequate training to acquire skill sets for employment.
Four Construction labourers working on building a house with red bricks. One person drinks tea while two are laying bricks. The person looking at the camera is smiling.
Soundarya, a 17-year-old agricultural labourer from Hugalur village in Karnataka’s Ballari district, had to drop out of school three years ago to support her family. The Child Labour (Prohibition and Regulation) Act allows for adolescents between the ages of 14 and 18 to take up non-exploitative work. However, the lack of adequate options provided to these children, especially girls, has left their rights unrecognised. Soundarya works from 9 am to 6 pm and is the sole breadwinner of her family of five. She earns Rs 150 per day, which helps her family survive. Soundarya aspires to acquire some skills that would help her improve her standard of living. But with no options provided to her by the government, she continues to hope that her petitions to the panchayat are recognised. “Boys have the option of learning plumbing, electrical work or how to be a mechanic. Options for girls are limited. I hope this changes,” she says. Soundarya adds that if she was provided vocational training, she would be able to lead a better life. The need to support their families Just like Soundarya, Mamata, a 16-year-old girl from Bannikallu village, says that she aspires to learn tailoring. Mamata lives in a shanty and is also the sole breadwinner in her family. Her meagre income ensures that her younger siblings are clothed and fed. “I have asked the panchayat officials in my village and also the taluk panchayat to give some of the girls training in tailoring or any vocation they want. It has been over a year and they have not done much,” she adds. Many boys and girls in rural and urban communities from low income backgrounds drop out of school voluntarily or out of desperation when they need to support their family. With the government focusing on bringing these children back to school, the rights of working children as a workforce goes unrecognised due to the stigma, says Kavita Ratna, a member of The Concerned for Working Children (CWC). “The burden is on these adolescents to take up work in order to support their families. The reason could also be because in many villages, high schools and colleges are located far away from their homes and they drop out due to lack of money to commute,” Kavita notes. How the coronavirus pandemic has affected working children “Before the coronavirus pandemic, I used to be able to go to work. Now there is no work. The ration given by the government includes only rice and wheat. We have not been given dal or any other supplies. I have incurred loans just to buy vegetables. We don’t even have enough vegetables to buy in my village. I have to walk to the neighbouring village to buy it,” Soundarya says. With no income, and mounting debts, Kavita says that once the lockdown is lifted, a lot more adolescents are likely to drop out of school as many families are likely to be impoverished due to the lack of a steady income. “Even during the floods in Belagavi and Bagalakote, so many adolescents dropped out of school to work and support their families. Many families are incurring loans to be able to pay for their daily needs, so once the lockdown ends we will see more children drop out of school for this purpose. This is exactly why we need a holistic education system, which is decentralised and where children have the option to choose what they want to learn,” she adds. Why the existing education system must change Soundarya says that academic education does not interest her and that she wants to learn a skill set that would help her earn more money. Mamata, on the other hand, says that she wants an option where she could go to school in the evenings while working during the day. The CWC has been advocating a skill-based education system that is decentralised at the panchayat level. Kavita maintains that the government should look at providing options for evening high school and also have vocational, academic and empowerment education. She says that if working children are identified at the panchayat level, their interests can be ascertained, and they can be trained accordingly. “Say the working girls are interested in tailoring or agricultural activities, they should be taught how to market what they produce. This is also learning. They should be taught empowerment studies and options must be given to them to take on academic learning too, if they are interested through scholarships,” she says. She further states that by decentralising the system, it will become easier to monitor whether the working children are being exploited or not. In addition, the monitoring of apprenticeship programmes can also be streamlined. “All work is not exploitative and no child has to work in an environment that is detrimental to their growth and development. In Western countries, children earn their pocket money. Here too, children must be given the option of vocational or academic learning. If they are identified at the panchayat level, they can also be placed in apprenticeship programmes and that can be monitored locally to avoid exploitation. It will be easier to anticipate concerns, identify those likely to drop out and come up with alternative solutions if this is decentralised,” she adds. The Bhima Sangha Thirty years ago, the Bhima Sangha, a union of working adolescents and children, chose April 30, the day before Labour Day as Child Labour Day. The Bhima Sangha chose this day to bring awareness and draw the attention of people and the government towards their existence, their contributions as a workforce, and their demands for alternative and safe workplaces. Over the years, April 30 has been adopted as Child Labour Day by many unions of working children in the country. The CWC is empowering working children in both urban and rural areas to form an association and start demanding the rightful facilities they are entitled to, from the government. Both Soundarya and Mamata are members of the Bhima Sangha in their respective villages. These are a group of boys and girls between the ages of 14 and 18 years, who have dropped out of school and started working for myriad reasons. The Bhima Sangha advocates the rights of children at the village level. “We highlight issues we face. For example, child marriage, or any problems related to working conditions, or lack of street lights. This can be risky for children who work. Every time we submit a request to the panchayat, we tie a red band outside the gate. This is to show that the panchayat has not yet resolved our issues. If they are resolved, we replace the red bands with white ones. This year, I tied a red band for the issue of child marriage and two months ago, I tied a white band for the cause after it was tackled,” Mamata says. She adds that she is awaiting vocational training for working girls in her village and hopes that a white band replaces the red one she has tied for the cause.
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Centre identifies 3 red districts as red zones in Karnataka: Full list

Coronavirus
In Karnataka, there are three districts identified as red zones, 13 as orange zones and 14 as green zones.
Empty stretch of MG Road in Bengaluru due to the lockdown
The Centre on Friday designated 733 districts across all states and Union Territories into red, orange and green Zones. A total of 130 districts in the country are designated as red zones, 284 as orange zones and 319 as green zones.   In Karnataka, the Union government has identified three districts as red zones, 13 districts as orange zones, and 14 districts in the green zones. However, the Centre has clarified that this list is dynamic and will be revised according to future developments. In districts deemed as red zones, the restrictions of lockdown will continue to apply and may not be lifted post May 3. Moreover, intra-district and inter-district travel will also be subjected to restrictions. In a letter to the Chief Secretaries of all states and Union territories, Union Health Secretary Preeti Sudan noted that some states have raised issues on inclusion of certain districts in the red-zone list. The criteria followed by the Union Ministry in classifying a district into one of the three zones -- red, orange and green – is different from the state’s. Initially the Centre identified a district as a red, orange or green zone based on the number of COVID-19 cases reported from there in total, and the doubling rate of the cases. However, over time, the number of recoveries in many states increased, and the Centre changed the criteria to include more factors like incidence of cases, doubling rate, extent of testing and surveillance feedback.  This list sent by the Centre is significantly different from that prepared by the Karnataka state COVID-19 War Room, and the latter’s classification of zones in the state. Here is the Centre’s full list: Red zones: Bengaulru Urban Mysuru Bengaluru Rural Orange zones: Belagavi Kalaburagi Vijayapaura Bagalkote Mandya Bidar Dakshina Kannada Ballari Chikkaballapura Dharwad Gadag Tumakuru Uttara Kannada Green zones: Davanagere Chamarajanagar Kodagu Ramanagra Hassan Kolar Chitradurga Chikkamagaluru Shivamogga Haveri Koppal Raichur Udupi Yadgir However, according to the Karnataka state government, the classification of red, orange and green zones is based on the following criteria. A red zone is one where there has been at least one COVID-19 case detected in the last 14 days. An orange zone is one where no cases have been reported in the last 14 days, but at least one in the last 15-28 days. A green zone is classified when the area has reported no COVID-19 cases in 28 days. Here is the classification according to the state government: Red zones: Bengalru Urban Mysuru Belagavi Kalaburagi Vijayapaura Bagalkote Mandya Bidar Dakshina Kannada Ballari Chikkaballapura Dharwad Gadag Tumakuru Davanagere Orange zones: Bengaluru Rural Uttara Kannada Udupi Green zones: Chamarajanagara Kodagu Ramanagra Hassan Kolar Chitradurga Chikkamagaluru Shivamogga Haveri Koppal Raichur Yadgir
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Testing of frontline workers begins in Bengaluru for COVID-19

Coronavirus
A total of 69 persons were tested on the first day.
A healthcare worker in blue PPE, mask and face shield tests a swab sample for COVID-19
PTI
Karnataka has started a “one-time testing” of doctors, nurses and all medical care professionals treating COVID-19 patients from Thursday, as directed by Health Commissioner Pankaj Pandey. In the coming days, the number of tests will gradually be increased. Other than healthcare professionals, officials working with the health department who are similarly exposed as doctors and nurses will also be tested.  In Bengaluru, KC General Hospital has been chosen for testing. So far, in Bengaluru, only one doctor has been found to be infected with SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19. Dr Venkateshaiah, Medical Superintendent of the KC General Hospital and in-charge of the testing programme in Bengaluru, told TNM, “As per the directions of the Commissionerate, we started testing the frontline workers in Bengaluru. 69 doctors, staff nurses and other healthcare providers were tested on Thursday. We will gradually increase the number of tests per day from 100 to 200.” Similar exercises will be expanded to all the other districts of Karnataka affected by the pandemic. The circular issued by the Health Commissioner on Wednesday said, “Since it is a linear screening of officers and staff who are apparently healthy, the "pooled sample" method is suggested.” A pooled sample method is where multiple swab samples are put together and tested using a single RTPCR test. If the test results of all samples are negative, that means all the people are negative for COVID-19. However, if even a single result is positive, everyone who is part of this sample will be tested again. This method is supposed to speed up results and reduce workload of labs. “The name of every person tested should be meticulously recorded with the details of the designation and phone number for future contact,” the Health Commissioner’s circular said. However, it added that the final decision of going either for individual or pooled testing lies with the local physician, depending on the medical condition of the personnel at the time of screening. The circular also said that the list of officials to be screened across departments will be prepared by the Joint Director of Department of Health and Family Welfare, Dr Srinivas. The whole process will be overlooked by Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike Commissioner BH Anil Kumar. The Joint Director of Health and Family Welfare and the BBMP Chief Health Officer, Dr Vijayendra, have been asked to actively assist in the programme.
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Karnataka CM tells industries to be ready to reopen from May 4

Coronavirus
"The state government is expecting further guidelines to resume industrial operations after May 3," said an official, quoting Yediyurappa.
Karnataka CM Yediyurappa, meeting the public during COVID-19
File photo
While awaiting new guidelines from the Centre on lifting the extended lockdown, Karnataka Chief Minister BS Yediyurappa advised apex bodies of industries to prepare to resume work from May 4, excepting in places that are coronavirus-hit containment zones in the state, an official said on Thursday. "The state government is expecting further guidelines to resume industrial operations after May 3," said an official, quoting Yediyurappa who was addressing the captains of industry and heads of trade bodies at an interaction with them on Thursday. This may mean that liquor marts such as MSIL and MRP stores, and select shopping complexes, will be allowed to begin operations beginning on May 4, as reported by the Times of India, especially as liquor sales are one of the biggest revenue generators for the state, and the Karnataka Excise department had warned that their coffers were running low. The Chief Minister also told the industry representatives that he was aware of the problems that they were facing but appealed to them to continue paying salaries to their employees. Insisting on physical distancing, Yediyurappa said that all precautionary measures should be taken for the employees' safety in the factory, including the wearing of masks and maintaining hygiene. The state government has allowed industrial activities in 14 districts already, which are green zones i.e. free from new coronavirus cases in the last 28 days. The Chief Minister also said that the Labour Department was giving permission to factory owners to extend work hours. Representatives who met Yediyurappa included those from the Federation of Karnataka Chambers of Commerce and Industry (FKCCI), Karnataka Small Scale Industries Association (KASSIA), Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce & Industry (FICCI), Confederation of Indian Industry (CII), Association of Women Entrepreneurs of Karnataka (AWAKE), Associated Chambers of Commerce and Industry of India (ASSOCHAM), Bangalore Chamber of Industry and Commerce (BCIC), Confederation of Women Entrepreneurs, and others. (Inputs from IANS)
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