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Friday, July 3, 2020

New diet plan for COVID-19 patients in Karnataka: Here’s how it looks

Coronavirus
This comes after many raised complaints about the food given to COVID-19 patients at hospitals in Bengaluru and other parts of the state.
PTI : Image for representation
The Karnataka government has issued orders to provide quality and nutritious food to COVID-19 patients receiving treatment in designated hospitals, an official said on Thursday. The order comes after complaints were raised about the food given to COVID-19 patients at hospitals in Bengaluru and other parts of the state. "Aimed at improving the immunity power in COVID-19 patients, they shall be provided with quality and nutritious food on time, as suggested by dieticians," said Jawaid Akhtar, Health Secretary of Karnataka.  According to the new order, breakfast will be served at 7 am, lunch at 1 pm and dinner at 7 pm. Here’s the new diet chart for COVID-19 patients:  Breakfast  Monday: Rava Idli Tuesday: Pongal Wednesday: Set Dosa Thursday: Rice Idli Friday: Bisi Bele Bath Saturday: Chow chow bath Sunday: Set Dosa Refreshments after breakfast Patients will be provided one fruit every day. Fruits such as watermelon, papaya and muskmelon will be served on alternate days.  Lunch All patients will receive roti, chapati, palya (a dish made with beans), rice, dal, egg and curd for lunch. Evening refreshment At 5 pm every evening, they will be served one banana and three cookies, two protein cookies, two dates and a mango bar for vitamin C. Dinner Dinner, which will be served at 9 pm, will consist of roti, chapati, palya, rice, dal and curd and flavoured milk. According to the health department, the new diet plan will benefit 8,194 COVID-19 patients undergoing treatment at designated hospitals across the southern state. With inputs from IANS
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Karnataka issues guidelines for home isolation of COVID-19 patients

Coronavirus
Until now, COVID-19 patients were isolated at COVID Care Centres or in hospitals in the state.
Image for representation
The Karnataka government has issued detailed guidelines for the isolation of COVID-19 patients at home. Until now, COVID-19 patients were isolated at COVID Care Centres or in hospitals in the state. But with the cases rising in Karnataka, health officials released guidelines for allowing patients who are asymptomatic or have mild symptoms to be isolated at home. It followed the guidelines laid down by the centre on Thursday. The home isolation of COVID-19 patients will be only after the home is assessed by government health officials. Moreover, the patient's condition will be informed to the neighbours. The isolation will be done with the knowledge of the family members and the physician. "The patient shall have a pulse oximeter, digital thermometer and personal protective equipment (facemasks, gloves) to be used during home isolation," the guidelines laid down by the government stated.  After a patient receives the positive COVID-19 test report, health officials will assess the patient's condition and the condition of the house. If the patient is asymptomatic or exhibiting mild symptoms, they will be eligible for home isolation. The patients should be younger than 50 years of age and their oxygen saturation level should be greater than or equal to 95%. "If  the  patient  has  the  following  comorbidities - Hypertension, diabetes, obesity, thyroid disease; they shall be well managed and under good clinical control as assessed by medical officer/physician," the guidelines stated.  But patients with serious comorbid conditions like kidney diseases including patients on dialysis, heart diseases, stroke, tuberculosis, cancer, people living with HIV, immune-compromised, on steroids and immune-suppressants, etc. will not be allowed to isolate themselves at home.  Patients in home isolation should seek the advice of the monitoring health department staff when symptoms of COVID-19 emerge. The patient will have to follow a series of stringent instructions maintaining distance from others in the house, disinfecting surfaces and wearing a N95 mask at all times. Patients will be released from home isolation when they do not exhibit symptoms. It will also be 17 days after the onset of symptoms or date of sampling (for asymptomatic patients) and at least 10 days after fever subsides.  "There is no need for the RT-PCR/CBNAAT/True-NAT test after the home isolation period is over," the guidelines added.
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Senators concerned about Covid-19 vaccine price controls

Senators questioned top Trump public health officials at a Thursday hearing on vaccine pricing.

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Thursday, July 2, 2020

Outside experts could decide who gets Covid vaccines first, NIH chief says

Federal officials may defer to the National Academy of Medicine.

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889 new COVID-19 cases in Bengaluru, contacts to be traced for most patients

Coronavirus
Karnataka reported 1,502 new coronavirus cases in the state on Thursday.
Woman recoils from a gloved hand trying to take a swab sample for covid testing in Chennai
PTI/Chennai
Karnataka reported 1502 new COVID-19 cases on Thursday, bringing the total active cases in the state to 9,406. The total cases so far reported in the state is 18,016. 889 new cases were reported in Bengaluru. Out of this, 872 cases have reported that the contacts are yet to be traced. A majority of the patients without known contacts are in Bengaluru, the data shows. On July 1, the state bulletin reported that 822 people had no known contacts. 90 COVID-19 cases were reported in Dakshina Kannada district on Thursday, while Mysuru recorded 68, Ballari at 65 and Dharwad at 47 COVID-19 cases. Karnataka reported 19 deaths in the state, taking total deaths in the state to 272. Four of the deaths were due to non COVID-19 causes. Ballari reported the highest number of fatalities, with four COVID-19 patients passing away. Three people have died in Dakshina Kannada district, while two deaths have been reported in Bengaluru. Udupi, Koppala, Mysuru, Hassana, Tumakuru, Belagavi and Uttar Kannada each reported one death. Kalaburagi reported one death, a 36-year-old man who had 'sudden loss of consciousness,' according to the bulletin. There have also been recent cases of political leaders testing positive for the virus. BJP MLA Bharat Shetty who represents Mangaluru North constituency, announced that had contracted COVID-19. "I have been tested COVID-19 positive. With all your blessings, I'm recovering and will be under treatment for few days. Requesting everyone to please maintain social distancing, wear a mask while going out and wash hands frequently. Please take care of yourselves and your near ones," he said in a tweet. Karnataka reported that 161 patients are currently in the ICU. Bengaluru reported 113 of the cases, while other districts showed less than 10 cases each. Meanwhile, 271 new recoveries were reported in Karnataka, taking the total recovered coronavirus cases in the state to 8,334 people who have been discharged.
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Supreme Court sidesteps abortion cases, shortly after striking Louisiana restrictions

Chief Justice John Roberts' vote with the court's liberal judges to overturn the Louisiana law wasn't the win for abortion rights advocates that many assumed.

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Migrants in Bengaluru shelter continue to face poor living conditions, uncertainty

Migrants
Activists allege that there is no government interest in coordination, which would make the process safer and easier for migrants waiting for trains to go home.
Migrant workers in Bengaluru carry luggage to go home at palace grounds
Pic: Rosemary Vishwanath
One might assume that the migrant crisis in Bengaluru, with thousands of workers wanting to go back to their hometowns, was over. But just this Monday, thousands of migrant workers converged at the Tripura Vasini convention centre in Palace Grounds, which holds migrants until they can board trains. Volunteers and activists working independently to support the government system say that there is a complete lack of process at this centre adding to the ordeal already being faced by the migrants. While many Shramik trains have been arranged to transport thousands of migrants from Bengaluru to various states like Jharkhand, Odisha, Bihar and Nagaland, the government is still processing people who want to leave Karnataka. Initially, there were about 1,500 people waiting for a train to north Indian states so that they could go home. When the government announced on Sunday night that there would be a train to Bihar, Jharkhand and Odisha, word spread quickly and several other migrants turned up at the convention centre. According to estimates by activists, there were nearly 3,000 people in total at the centre. “Since each train has a capacity of about 1,800 people, not all who gathered could take the train. This left more than 1,500 people behind,” says Tanveer Ahmed, who works with Mercy Mission, a coalition of NGOs in the city. Government inefficiency The main problem that migrants wanting to go home face is lack of information. The trains and their destinations are not announced until the night before the train is scheduled to leave, after which migrants gather at the designated convention centre. The government does not have an efficient way to communicate information, activists allege. “The helpline numbers are rarely useful. Even if someone picks up, they ask the person to go and get information from some other office. Then what is the point of the helpline?” says Rosemary Vishwanath, a volunteer with Bangalore with Migrants. Besides, there is no helpdesk at the convention centre where the migrants stay until there are enough people for a train to be arranged. There is no way to communicate with them on the ground, either. “We don’t have any sort of public address system. Even the two policemen stationed here were not given a van whose address system could be used to communicate information to the large crowds of people,” says Aditi from Bangalore with Migrants. Finally, the government was able to send about 1,800 people on the train to Bihar, Jharkhand and Odisha. There was some confusion about whether a second train would be announced, and the migrant workers were stuck in the convention centre for hours with no proper water, sanitation or lighting facilities. The large numbers of people who had gathered due to the lack of information also became a huge logistical problem for the government authorities. Activists said that there were over a thousand people who needed help with filling forms and only three government officials capturing the data. “A second train was announced in the evening and people were crowding together to get information. In the evening, there was only one person handling the data entry. Finally, the Joint Commissioner decided that no data would be entered, and they would only collect their forms and allow them to leave. The train left at 11.51 pm that night,” Tanveer says. He adds, “If the second train was routed better, through Bihar, then another 500 people could’ve also left that night.” The second train carried migrants to Odisha, Jharkhand and West Bengal. Lack of facilities at shelter The Tripura Vasini convention centre, situated about 5 km from the main train station in the city, hosts migrant workers who are set to leave to city, in order to process their forms and papers. With a majority of migrants having already left, the government seems to have lost interest in maintaining basic facilities, allege activists. Saniya, one of the few volunteers who continues to work with the migrants, says, “There are no basic facilities. The government has not paid the convention centre, so there is no water or electricity, and no one is cleaning the toilets. The hall can fit more than 1,000 people at a time, but there are just three toilets.” Since there is no electricity, there are neither lights nor fans, and the space becomes overheated when thousands are stuck at the centre, Saniya says.
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