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Tuesday, July 7, 2020

800 new cases reported in Bengaluru on Tuesday, 1,498 new cases recorded in state

Coronavirus
Karnataka, including Bengaluru, saw a drop in the total number of daily cases for the second consecutive day.
covid testing in bengaluru
Representational image/PTI
The number of new COVID-19 cases recorded in Bengaluru saw a dip for the second consecutive day with 800 new cases on Tuesday, taking the total number of active cases to 9,395 in Karnataka’s capital. Bengaluru reported 1,235 new cases on Sunday and 981 cases on Monday. Among the 800 cases, 42 of them were categorised as either severe acute respiratory infection (SARI) and influenza-like illness (ILI). All other patients did not have relevant contact or travel history. No new COVID-19 death was reported from Bengaluru city on Tuesday. In a corresponding drop in the number of cases statewide compared to the last two days, Karnataka saw 1,498 new cases on Tuesday, taking the number of active cases to 15,297 across 30 districts of the state. Karnataka saw 1,925 cases on Sunday and 1,843 on Monday.  A total of 571 patients were discharged from hospitals following their recovery in the state, of which 265 were from Bengaluru. Dakshina Kannada reported 83 new cases on Tuesday becoming the second-highest in the daily increase of cases. Dharwad (57), Kalaburagi and Bidar (51 each), Mysuru (49), Ballari (37), Uttara Kannada (35) and Shivamogga (33) were the other districts with more than 30 cases.  A total of 279 patients in the state are in a critical condition out of whom 175 are in Bengaluru. 15 such patients are from Ballari while 11 are from Raichur. No other district in the state has more than 10 critical COVID-19 patients. With a total of 15 COVID-19 deaths reported from the state on Tuesday, the state death toll for the pandemic rose to 416. Out of the 15 deaths, four each was reported from Bidar and Mysuru. Kalaburagi reported two case fatalities, while Davanagare, Belagavi, Bagalkote, Hassan and Dharwad reported one death each. Despite the continued spike in cases, the state government has denied community transmission contradicting even experts working with the state administration. “There is no community spread so far, I am making it very clear. We are still in between the second and the third stage, we haven't reached the third stage yet,” state Health Minister B Sriramulu said earlier in the day.
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Demands of contract doctors, ASHA workers will be met: Ktaka Health Min Sriramulu

Coronavirus
Contract doctors have demanded to be regularised, and ASHA workers have demanded an increase in pay.
Karnataka Ministers and Health Dept bureaucrats
File image
Concerns raised by 600 contract doctors as well as ASHA and anganwadi workers in the state will be addressed, Karnataka Health Minister B Sriramulu said on Tuesday.    Contract doctors had two primary demands — that their pay is increased and that they are made permanent. The salaries of these doctors was hiked at the start of July to Rs 60,000 from Rs 45,000 after they threatened to quit en masse. However, their other major demand of being made permanent was left unaddressed.   “Contract doctors who are protesting demanding that their services be made permanent need not worry. In 2008-09, during my previous stint as the Health Minister, 1944 contractor doctors were made permanent. Today [Tuesday], the Chief Minister has agreed to make 600 of these doctors permanent. The decision will be taken after a meeting with the contract doctors,” Sriramulu told reporters.   On the issue of ASHA (accredited social health activists) and anganwadi workers also being discontent, he urged the workers not to quit service and assured that their demands will be met.  They have been demanding that they are paid Rs 12,000 each month. They are currently paid around Rs 4,000.  Sriramulu was speaking to reporters following a meeting with a central government delegation visiting the state regarding the management of the pandemic. In that meeting, the Karnataka government said that there was no community spread of COVID-19 in the state.  “There is no community spread so far, I am making it very clear. We are still in between the second and the third stage, we haven't reached the third stage yet," Sriramulu said. As of July 6, 25,317 COVID-19 cases have been recorded in the state, which includes 401 deaths and 10,527 discharges. However, the contacts of many patients who tested positive recently, especially in Bengaluru, are yet to be traced. Chief Minister BS Yediyurappa held discussions with the Additional Secretary of Health and Family Welfare department Arti Ahuja and the Director of Emergency Medical Relief P Raveendran regarding the COVID-19 situation in the state.
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U.S. pumps $2B into Covid-19 vaccine, treatment development

The treatment advanced through an early safety study and is now being studied in a 2,000-patient Phase III trial.

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Hotels, homestays in Kodagu ordered to stop hosting new guests

Hospitality
However, the order has stated that personal and emergency travel will not be barred.
Kodagu ordered to stop hosting new guests
The Kodagu district administration has stated that no hotels, resorts, lodges or homestays in the district can host guests until further notice, beginning Tuesday. In addition to this direction, the order said establishments should stop taking advanced bookings from customers both online and offline. The establishments were also ordered to inform incoming guests who had already made reservations before they reached the district. However, the order has stated that personal and emergency travel will not be barred. The exempted travellers will be asked to submit their travel and personal details to police stations or the urban and rural local authorities. Currently, the district has 74 active COVID-19 cases and has seen one death related to the disease. The new curb on tourism comes as the sector continues to struggle to regain some business after lockdown restrictions were eased. Many establishments had tweaked their amenities and had introduced special offers, such as workstation availability for customers to work remotely from the tourist destination. According to media reports, resort owners were working to ensure good internet connectivity and related furniture to facilitate work from resorts. Working professionals from Bengaluru and Mysuru were primarily targeted for these amenities. As of July 6, 25,317 COVID-19 cases have been recorded in the state, which includes 401 deaths and 10,527 discharges.  Among the 14,385 active patients in the state, 8860 are from Bengaluru.
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Bengaluru’s Shantala Nagar witnesses surge in coronavirus cases: Here’s why

Coronavirus
BBMP officials say that the increase in the number of cases is primarily due to four clusters in the ward.
Representation photo
Since the beginning of July, the number of people contracting COVID-19 in Bengaluru’s central business district has rapidly increased. The area, which comes under the Shantala Nagar ward, saw 235 patients contracting the novel coronavirus between July 1 and 6, according to Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike’s (BBMP) war room data. The highest number of cases were reported on July 3, with 62 cases in Shantala Nagar alone. Speaking to TNM, Shantala Nagar corporator MB Dwarakanath said that the rise in the number of cases is due to four clusters within the ward. These include the Police quarters in Austin Town, Vittal Mallya Road, St Philomena’s Hospital and Xavier Layout. The first case in the ward was reported in Austin Town’s YG Palya, where a constable tested positive earlier in June. Following this, eight of his family members tested positive too, said Dr Srinivas, BBMP surveillance officer for Shantala Nagar.  Soon after this, in late June, a senior consulting doctor at St Philomena’s Hospital became a primary contact after his mother got COVID-19. She was a patient with Severe Acute Respiratory Illness and was admitted to St Philomena’s for treatment. “Doctors and nurses were providing extra care to the patient as she was the aged mother of a colleague. After that, 15 people, including doctors, nurses and hospital staff at St Philomena’s, tested positive,” Dr Srinivas added.  The third cluster of patients include two families residing on Vittal Mallya Road. After one family member from each household tested positive, Dr Srinivas said all other family members got COVID-19 too. “This was around 11 people. There is another cluster in Xavier Layout, where a man tested positive and subsequently his family members too did. What is happening in Shantala Nagar is that a lot of primary contacts of patients in these four clusters have contracted the disease,” Dr Srinivas added. Corporator Dwarakanath said that the reason the cases in Shantala Nagar, which includes areas in CBD including Brigade Road, MG Road, Residency Road and Church Street, are increasing is due to the increased movement of people after lockdown restrictions were eased.  “A lot of people keep coming to CBD; many migrants in white collar jobs have also returned from other states. There are people coming in to visit these areas from different parts of the city too. Naturally, the movement is higher in these areas. I will meet people from various associations and take their suggestions on how to curb the spread,” he added.
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Why Bengaluru’s private hospitals are turning away COVID-19 patients

Coronavirus
TNM spoke to representatives of private hospitals, a member of the COVID-19 expert committee and the Minister for Medical Education to find out the reasons.
Representation photo
A 52-year-old businessman in Bengaluru with COVID-19 passed away for want of medical care last week. He was denied treatment by 18 different hospitals before he died at his residence in the city.  Over the last couple of weeks, several reports have emerged, where patients with COVID-19 have had to run from pillar to post to find a bed in a hospital. After the death of the 52-year-old man, the state government had issued show cause notices to nine private hospitals, stating that action would be taken if patients with COVID-19 are denied treatment. However, even after his death, several cases of patients being denied treatment have emerged. Read: The harrowing stories of Bengaluru COVID-19 patients who struggled to get medical help As of Monday, there are 8,197 COVID-19 patients in Bengaluru. While patients who are asymptomatic with co-morbidities, and those who present with mild symptoms are sent to COVID-19 Care Centres, those with moderate symptoms are treated at designated healthcare centres, while patients who have severe symptoms are admitted at designated COVID-19 hospitals.  Bengaluru has 3,879 beds in government hospitals. The Karnataka Health Department states that only 24% of the total beds in government hospitals have been occupied.  Private hospitals have set aside 1899 beds for the treatment of COVID-19 patients in the city. Out of these, 1154 beds have been occupied, while 745 are vacant. This means that 60.76% of beds dedicated for COVID-19 patients in private hospitals are already occupied, according to the Karnataka Private Medical Establishments Association. Despite beds being available, a number of private hospitals continue to turn away COVID-19 patients.  The larger question here is why are patients struggling to find beds? TNM spoke to representatives of private hospitals, a member of the COVID-19 expert committee and also the Minister for Medical Education in Karnataka, to find out the cause for the existing situation.  ‘Govt didn’t give us enough time to prepare’ “We have non-COVID-19 patients. Before the government announced on June 23 that private hospitals also had to treat COVID-19 patients, the beds were already occupied. Patients’ families, politicians, doctors, and ‘corona warriors’ keep calling different hospitals to check whether beds are available and most say they don’t. We have only around 25 private hospitals in Bengaluru with over 100 beds. Turning these into COVID-19 hospitals is not easy and the government did not give us enough time to prepare,” said Dr Ravindra, General Secretary of the Karnataka Private Medical Establishments’ Association.  Dr Ravindra said that in both government and private hospitals, there are several asymptomatic patients, who are being treated in hospitals, contrary to the state’s treatment protocol. “We had requested home isolation for asymptomatic patients in April itself. The government announced this just a few days ago. If this delay was sorted, then there would be more space in hospitals and COVID-19 care centres,” he said.  He further noted that the state government had time and again indicated that government hospitals would be able to tackle the COVID-19 situation in the state, especially in Bengaluru. Dr Ravindra said that despite suggesting to the government that mobilising infrastructure in private hospitals would take two weeks to a month, they were blindsided by the sudden announcement on June 23 that private establishments would have to provide 50% beds for COVID-19 patients.  “We kept asking the government again and again whether we should be preparing to tackle COVID-19 cases. The only talks we have held so far are related to the price cap for COVID-19 treatment. Suddenly, one day at 6pm on June 23, we learned that private hospitals too were supposed to treat COVID-19 patients. We were blindsided. These issues of bed availability are occurring as the government is largely unprepared and did not use the  lockdown period effectively,” Dr Ravindra added.  He further stated that as the state government did not provide adequate time for private hospitals to ramp up infrastructure, several hospitals are now facing problems. “Operation theatres have to have negative pressure infra arrangements. Almost all private hospitals in Bengaluru don’t have this. If there is negative pressure, then airflow from the OT will be stopped even if doors of the OT open and close. Since, many hospitals don’t have this, if the OT door is open, the chances of the virus spreading from a COVID-19 patient inside the OT to those outside is high. This can’t be done in a matter of two weeks. The government’s planning and lack of execution of these plans during lockdown has led to this state,” he said.  He stated that the state government formed a committee under the chairmanship of SR Vishwanath, political advisor to Chief Minister BS Yediyurappa, to discuss how to tackle the shortage of beds. Dr Ravindra, who is also part of the committee, said that it was set up only on June 29 and the committee has not met even a single time to come up with an action plan.  Dr Ravindra said that Additional Chief Secretary Jawaid Akthar held talks with representatives of KPME thrice since March 22, when the lockdown began. But the preparations that were supposed to take place in the two months of lockdown were largely neglected, he alleged.  “The government was supposed to set up a call centre in April itself. KPME had suggested that a centralised call centre automated to allocate beds and tend to patient queries is really necessary. This would have helped us avoid the current situation where people have to call 20 to 30 hospitals to find out if there is a bed. Now the government is telling us to set up our own call centre for private hospitals. This is not right,” Dr Ravindra added.  Private hospitals are short on staff  Dr HN Ravindra, President of the Indian Medical Association’s Karnataka chapter, said that in most private hospitals, which have been designated for COVID-19 patients, doctors, nurses, paramedical staff and housekeeping staff have stopped coming to work, as they are scared of contracting the infection.  “The worst hit are the housekeeping staff. They come from low income backgrounds, most of them cannot afford physical distancing. They have small children and their parents living in the same house and their fear of contracting the infection is not unfounded. The government has just failed to motivate these frontline workers. With reduced staff, private hospitals are also short on staff to treat patients even if we have beds,” Dr HN Ravindra added.  He said that just like government doctors, even those doctors working in private COVID-19 hospitals must be given monetary incentives like increased pay. “Although this is a temporary solution, it will at least motivate them to work in the short term,” he added.  Real-time mapping of available bed needed Dr Girdhar Babu, an epidemiologist working with the Public Health Foundation of India, who is working closely with both the state and central governments for COVID-19 management says the handling of the crisis needs course correction.  “It's not a shortage per se which is the problem but the coordination is. A  realistic mapping of beds with a real time allocation should be aided by technology. When we need the apps most, they are not there,” he told TNM. Another reason for the ‘shortage’ in beds at private hospitals may be on account of the fixed tariff set by the Karnataka government for the treatment of COVID-19 patients. Read: COVID-19 price cap for private hospitals: Docs, public health experts, patients slam K'taka govt Suggesting that private hospitals were unhappy with the price cap, Dr Babu said, “It appears that it might be due to several reasons. It is not surprising that beds are available if people walk in for paying cash whereas they are not when patients are presented to them from the Government. Why aren't the beds and areas segregated for COVID-19, and have free access to BBMP for admission?” When asked if the government should take over private facilities by invoking the National Disaster Management Act, like in Maharashtra, he said it would not necessarily result in solutions and opined that the government works closely with the private sector to manage the pandemic. “By force, the Government would have to face the same troubles as the private in bringing in the required manpower and skill set required to run the hospitals. Engaging with the private sector has begun only recently. We should explore all other options before any drastic moves are even contemplated,” he told TNM. Medical Education Minister warns private hospitals Karnataka Medical Education Minister Dr K Sudhakar warned private hospitals of strict action if they continued to turn away COVID-19 patients. He, however, refused to acknowledge the government’s lethargy in ramping up resources to treat the expected surge in cases. “Those who fail to treat patients sent by the government will face legal consequences. We can stop their OPD (outpatient department) from functioning or even revoke their license. But we don't want to be authoritative and want to take a cohesive approach,” Dr K Sudhakar told TNM. Dr Sudhakar, however, agreed that there is not enough motivation among healthcare workers and doctors to continue to be on the frontlines. “There is not enough motivation for health workers and doctors and we have to find a way to motivate them. I appeal to medical workers and doctors to come forward and serve in this time of crisis,” he added. 
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COVID-19: Karnataka govt shuts down 110 pharmacies for failing to keep records

Coronavirus
The Health Department had ordered pharmacies to keep track of and inform district authorities about persons purchasing medicines for symptoms of SARI and ILI.
The Karnataka Health and Family Welfare Department cancelled the licenses of 110 pharmacies across the state for violating an order related to managing the pandemic. Three of them were from Bengaluru, a note from the department said on Monday. These stores were penalised as they failed to keep a record and inform the district authorities about persons purchasing medicines for symptoms of Severe Acute Respiratory Infection (SARI) and Influenza-like Illness (ILI), such as fever and the common cold. Pharmacies were asked to keep track of the sale of antipyretics, anti-inflammatory, anti-allergy and antitussive drugs like paracetamol, cetirizine, chlorpheniramine and cough syrups. 70 of these shops were from Ballari district alone, while Vijayapura had 15 such shops and 9 were from Raichur. No other district had more than five such instances.  A note issued by the department said this penal action was taken under the Karnataka Epidemic Disease (COVID-19) Regulation 2020. According to the state COVID-19 War Room data published on Tuesday morning, among the 25,000+ COVID-19 cases in the state, 2,099 cases are among ILI patients and 436 are SARI patients with no relevant travel or contact history. Experts and officials working in the state have earlier said that early detection of SARI/ILI cases increases their chances of survival. The mortality rate of SARI and ILI patients in the state is also high. According to a mortality analysis data by the war room released on June 19, patients having SARI have a mortality rate of 56.38%, while ILI patients had a mortality rate of 27.71%. Days into the pandemic, the state government had issued an order directing all pharma and drug stores to keep a note of all persons including their contact details as a measure of surveillance for COVID-19. Similar orders were passed for private medical establishments to report patients with SARI/ILI symptoms or other symptoms of COVID-19. Deccan Herald on June 14 had reported four Bengaluru clinics were shut as they did not report SARI/ ILI cases to the government.
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