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Sunday, August 2, 2020

Trial for ayurvedic tablets for COVID-19 in Bengaluru to be suspended

Coronavirus
The clinical trial of Dr Giridhar Kaje’s tablets was going on at Victoria Hospital, which comes under Bangalore Medical College and Research Institute.
Dr Giridhar Kaje
Dr Giridhar Kaje/ Facebook
A Bengaluru-based ayurvedic medical practitioner Dr Giridhar Kaje has been warned by the ethics committee of the Bangalore Medical College and Research Institute (BMCRI) for promoting a medicine claiming it can ‘cure’ COVID-19, without any evidence. Dr Kaje, the principal investigator at Prashanthi Ayurvedic Centre in Rajajinagar, had introduced two tablets named Bhoumya and Saathmya, the clinical trial for which was going at Victoria Hospital (which comes under BMCRI). However, BMCRI has now decided to suspend the trial, which had started after the  Indian Council for Medical Research (ICMR) had given a green light.  Dr CR Jayanthi, director and dean of BMCRI said the hospital will suspend trials for the medicine as Dr Kaje went to the media claiming its without first going through the ethics committee. Dr Jayanthi told The New Indian Express that the two tablets were used only on 10 patients and that too as a supplement to regular treatment. Speaking to the Times of India, Dr Kaje denied the allegations and said that he is yet to get an official notice in hand, although it has been reported in the media. The notice reportedly called out Dr Kaje for his “unacceptable and overstepping his responsibility”.   TOI quoted the notice from BMCRI saying, “This is unacceptable and amounts to overstepping one’s responsibility. You are aware that any disclosure of such sensitive information will have to be with all clearances from various appropriate authorities. The above act is viewed seriously since the information is very sensitive in the present circumstance.” TOI reported that Tourism Minister CT Ravi has also advocated the use of the tablets and claimed that he got ‘cured’ after taking the medicines as prescribed by Dr Kaje. Dr Kaje, however, claimed his Facebook page that he himself had said that he will not prescribe the medicines before it has been approved.
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Bengaluru’s Sakra Hospital booked for allegedly not providing info on COVID-19 beds

Coronavirus
The complaint was filed by a health department official on the insistence of the Bengaluru Urban Deputy Commissioner GN Shivamurthy.
Sakra Hospital building
Twitter
The police in Bengaluru have booked Sakra Hospital at Devarabisanahalli on the Outer Ring Road for allegedly not complying with the COVID-19 regulations of providing information on its bed occupancy. A first information report (FIR) has been filed against the hospital at the Marathahalli Police Station after the health department officials complained that the administration of the hospital did not provide information about the status of bed occupancy for COVID-19 patients. The officials also alleged that the hospital did not inform the number of patients it treated between July 23 and 29.  The complaint was filed by a health department official on the insistence of the  Bengaluru Urban Deputy Commissioner GN Shivamurthy. According to a report in the Hindu, the FIR mentions that the hospital management failed to disclose information, as directed by the special officers and the nodal officer concerned, when they went to inspect the hospital on July 29.  The report said that the FIR has been registered under sections of the Disaster Management Act, 2005, and the Epidemic Diseases (Amendment) Ordinance, 2020, and the accused have been named as Deepak Balani, head of the hospital and two others associates, Deepthi and Deepak Agarkad. The Times of India reported that IAS officer Uma Mahadevan and IPS officer Sunil Agarwal, the nodal officers assigned to help patients find beds in hospitals, had sought the bills and payment slips from the hospital for patients admitted between July 23 and July 29. This team is one of the seven such teams, led by one Indian Administrative Service (IAS) official and one Indian Police Service (IPS) officer, formed to reign in private hospitals in Bengaluru in the wake of complaints of overcharging. TOI quoted a police official saying that the team of IPS and IAS officers wanted to check if the hospital was following the price cap put in place by the Karnataka government for COVID-19 treatment. However, the hospital has denied the allegation and said that they were unaware of the FIR registered against them while speaking with the newspaper. Deepak, who has been named in the FIR, told TOI that they were working with the government to tackle this pandemic and said the legal proceeding was a setback.
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Bengaluru reported highest number of COVID-19 recoveries in a day at 1683

Coronavirus
While Karnataka reported 5,172 new cases of coronavirus in the state, 1,852 are in Bengaluru.
A covid testing booth
Representational image/PTI
Karnataka reported another day of more than 5,000 new cases in 24 hours. However, on the bright side, the state has reported the highest number of recoveries in a single day. A total of 53,678 patients in Karnataka recovered and have been discharged so far, with 3,860 patients being discharged on Saturday evening. Bengaluru reported the highest number of recoveries, with 1,683 discharges. Ballari district reported the second-highest number of discharges, at 408. The state reported 5,172 new cases on Saturday, taking the total cases in the state to 1,29,287. The current active cases in the state stand at 73,219 cases. Bengaluru reported the highest spike in the state on Saturday, with 1,852 cases of coronavirus. This takes the total cases in the city to 57,396 cases. Other districts reported more than 200 cases in 24 hours: Mysuru reported 365 new cases, while Ballari reported 269 cases. Kalaburagi and Belagavi both reported 219 new cases of coronavirus. Districts that reported more than 100 cases include: Dharwada (184), Hassana (146), Dakshina Kannada (139), Udupi (136 new) cases, Bagalkote (134), Vijayapura (129), Shivamogga (119), Raichuru (109), Davangere (108), and Koppala (107).  A total of 98 persons succumbed to the disease in Karnataka, as on Saturday, taking the total deaths in the state to 2,412. Bengaluru reported the most number of deaths due to COVID-19, with 27 deaths. Mysuru reported nine deaths, while Dakshina Kannada and Dharwada districts reported eight deaths each. In Kalaburagi, five patients died due to COVID-19. A total of 602 patients are in the intensive care units (ICU) across the state. Out of this, 338 patients are in the ICUs across Bengaluru urban district. Karnataka reported that 34,760 tests were conducted on this date, with 21,075 being rapid antigen tests and 13,685 being RT-PCR tests.
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Saturday, August 1, 2020

Karnataka to adopt NEP from August: Education Minister Suresh Kumar

Policy
The government said that it will merge the state policy with the new National Education Policy.
Picture of primary school age girls and boys lined up for the camera. they are wearing their Karnataka government issued school uniforms and smiling at the camera
Pixabay
Karnataka will adopt the new National Education Policy (NEP) from August after merging a draft state policy with it, state Primary and Secondary Education Minister Suresh Kumar said on Friday. "In two weeks' time, the NEP and a state policy will be merged to bring out a separate policy for Karnataka," said Suresh Kumar. Suresh Kumar revealed these plans in a video conference he had with NEP draft committee Chairman Krishnaswamy Kasturirangan. He further said that the state will be at the forefront in implementing the policy systematically, and observed that NEP is a complete policy. The Karnataka government has already passed a resolution accepting the Central government's National Education Policy and held a meeting on how to implement it. “A resolution was passed accepting the NEP," said Deputy Chief Minister of Karnataka and Minister for Higher Education, CN Ashwath Narayan. Ashwath Narayan had held a meeting with the members of the Task Force on the Implementation of NEP 2020. According to the minister, the task force will present a plan of action on August 16 and a detailed plan of action on August 20. The Union Cabinet, chaired by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, on Wednesday approved the NEP 2020, making way for large-scale, transformational reforms in school and higher education sectors. As the first education policy of the millennium, it will replace the 34-year-old National Policy on Education (NPE), 1986. On Friday, Karnataka Chief Minister BS Yediyurappa and Narayan met Kasturirangan and honoured him. "Visited and congratulated Kasturirangan, chairman of the committee on NEP 2020, in the presence of Yediyurappa. NEP is set to transform our nation's education sector for which all of us are grateful to Kasturirangan and his team," said Narayan. Kasturirangan was former chairman of the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO), and a former Rajya Sabha member. He held several other important positions across the country. Read: Mother tongue vs English: NEP’s recommendation on medium of instruction revives debate Read: Stakeholders divided over extension of RTE up to 18 years in NEP 2020 Also read: NEP 2020: Why altering school education in India has divided experts
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Karnataka Human Rights Commission admits complaint over govt’s pandemic management

Coronavirus
The complaint against the management of the pandemic was filed by Congress MLA MK Patil.
Congress MLA HK Patil smiles at the camera in this file photo. he has all white hair and all white clothes
HK Patil on FB
The Karnataka State Human Rights Commission (KSHRC) has accepted a complaint against the state government over its handling of the COVID-19 pandemic. In a letter dated July 29, Congress MLA HK Patil wrote to the Commission alleging major lapses in governance which ‘affected the general population’. The SHRC accepted the complaint, and passed an order which reads, “It is alleged in the complaint that since few months, the people of Karnataka are dying due to COVID-19 Pandemic spread. More than 2000 people are affected every day and 40-50 people are dying every day due to COVID-19, but the government is not taking care of it and there is lack of sincerity amongst the politicians as well as Government officials.” The order states that there is rampant corruption in crisis management. It said, “There is rampant corruption and the victims are not getting proper treatment in Covid centres and they are not getting even ambulance service even after waiting for 2-3 days because of which they lose their lives without proper care and treatment. The doctors and nurses are not having PPE kits and bodies of the COVID-19 patients are not cremated in a humanitarian manner in various districts i.e., Ballari, Raichur, Davanagere, Chitradurga, Bengaluru etc., causing gross violation of human rights of the people of the State.” A hearing on the issue was held on July 28 headed by Chairperson (Retd) Justice DH Waghela. The Congress has consistently raised allegations of governmental corruption in the management of COVID-19 in the state. Congress leader and Karnataka Leader of Opposition Siddaramaiah has been vocal about alleged corruption in the procurement of beds for the 10,000-bed COVID Care Centre in Bengaluru. Another allegation has surfaced that the government has bought test kits at a much higher price than other states have.
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Cabinet ‘berth pangs’ in Karnataka: The many challenges for BS Yediyurappa

Politics
Ahead of a cabinet restructuring, panic and lobbying has begun. Deputy chief minister Laxman S Savadi was in New Delhi to lobby for his continuance in office.
Picture of Chief Minister of Karnataka BS Yediyurappa reclining on a leather armchair while wearing headphones and holding up a sheaf of papers. He is wearing an all white safari suit and looks tense as it is a session in the Vidhana Soudha
“Wait till August 15, I am going to become a minister,'' proclaimed eight-time BJP MLA Umesh V Katti, representing Hukkeri assembly constituency in Belagavi district. Having missed the cabinet berth in the two cabinet expansions of Karnataka Chief Minister BS Yediyurappa, the political heavyweight from Belagavi district and sugar baron, Katti is certain that this time he will make it. Katti is not alone in staking claim for a ministerial post as the ‘berth pangs’ have started not only for those who are aspirants but ministers as well with indications that Yediyurappa is expected to get the nod from the BJP central leadership shortly to go in for a cabinet reshuffle and expansion. Deputy Chief Minister Laxman S Savadi was the first to exhibit his panic on the cabinet restructuring exercise by dashing to New Delhi on July 27, skipping the event to mark Yediyurappa's one year in office. The visit created a flutter in BJP circles with speculations that he had gone to do the spadework for a change in leadership, but it was reportedly a solo action for his political resurgence and survival. According to BJP sources, a reshuffle and filling of the six vacancies in the Karnataka cabinet is expected in August. Fighting the pandemic COVID-19, Yediyurappa who said that one has to live with the coronavirus is reportedly looking at overhauling his one-year-old cabinet. He had inducted 17 ministers including three deputy chief ministers on August 20, 2019 and 10 more on February 6, 2020, who were the disqualified Congress-JD(S) MLAs after they won the assembly by-polls on a BJP ticket. The Karnataka cabinet's strength is 34 including the CM. It's learnt Savadi apprehended that he would be dropped in the cabinet reshuffle. A surprise entrant to the cabinet when he was not a member of either Houses of the Karnataka legislature, Savadi was propped up by the BJP high command to be groomed as an alternative to Yediyurappa, as both represent the Lingayat community. However, Savadi is said to have failed to meet the central leadership's expectations on many counts Savadi is said to have camped in New Delhi to strengthen his case for continuance in the cabinet. While Savadi's was a case to stay afloat, it resulted in some names doing the rounds for the CM's post on the premise that the party was not happy with Yediyurappa. Prominent was Union minister Pralhad Joshi, who has been an aspirant for the post. However, sources close to the BJP central leadership ruled out such a move. ”The  central leadership is not happy on many issues, but it is also aware that some ministers were imposed on Yediyurappa from the top. They are not looking at an alternative. While the ministers involved in COVID-19 control management are working at cross purposes the rest are not seen,'' they added. BJP sources stated that Savadi's was an act of desperation and there were no indications of him being guided by someone at the top this time. “The present party high command does not guide prematurely, but waits and watches till the end before stepping in,'' a senior BJP functionary said. He cited the example of Yediyurappa, who was keen on his son BY Vijayendra contesting from Varuna assembly constituency in 2018. Yediyurappa intensely campaigned for his son and at the last minute was told he has to give the 'B" form (which says a person is the party's official candidate) to another nominee. BJP/RSS functionary Ramlal called up Yediyurappa to inform that if he insists on giving the ‘B’ to Vijayendra, the central leadership will have to issue a ‘C’ form (which nullifies the B form), the functionary recalled. Uphill task for BSY The astute politician that he is, Yediyurappa is aware that he will not get be able to constitute a ‘please all’ or a ‘dream’ cabinet. Unlike his predecessors who nominated legislators as chairpersons of boards and corporations to mollify those missing the cabinet berth, the CM chose to do so in advance. He had done this in October 2019 ahead of the by-polls to 15 assembly seats to placate the ticket aspirants as the BJP had decided to field the disqualified Congress-JD(S) MLAs from these constituencies. Of the eight appointments made, only one aspirant accepted it. Earlier, this week Yediyurappa replicated the same strategy but it backfired. Of the 24 BJP MLAs appointed to the boards and corporations, the CM had to withdraw the notification to four such statutory bodies. Six-time MLA G H Thippa Reddy, a ministerial aspirant said it was an insult that he was offered a chairman's post. Another MLA MP Kumaraswamy also declined, while Nehru C Olekar representing Haveri said the CM was aware that he was keen on becoming a minister. The biggest challenge for Yediyurappa will be tackling the aspirants from Belagavi district as it is over-represented in the present cabinet with Savadi, Ramesh L Jarkiholi, Shashikala Jolle and  Shrimanth Balasaheb Patil. In the 28 member cabinet (including Yediyurappa), of the 30 districts in Karnataka, 12 are still unrepresented. Bengaluru has the highest share with seven, followed by four from Belagavi, Shivamogga and Haveri two each, and 13 districts have one minister each. Dakshina Kannada, Bengaluru rural, Kalaburagi, Raichur, Koppal, Mysuru, Kolar and Chamarajanagar districts have gone unrepresented. The lone woman minister Shashikala Jolle, who hails from Belagavi district is lobbying in New Delhi for her retention, with women MLAs Poornima Srinivas and Roopali Santosh Naik in the race. Besides Yediyurappa has to fulfil his promise given to the turncoat legislators AH Vishwanath, M T B Nagaraj and R Shankar, whom he had introduced as ‘future ministers’ while inducting them into the party. Speaking to TNM, Katti admitted that Belagavi was over-represented. “The CM knows who is capable. I have been a minister for 13 years in all BJP CMs cabinets. Wait for another 15 days and I will be a minister,” he added. BJP sources said the cabinet expansion was bound to cause some rumblings in the party, but ruled out any threat to Yediyurappa's leadership. “The grip Yediyurappa has on the Lingayat community cannot be disturbed, and RSS-BJP circles have calculated that in the worst-case scenario, the party will bag 70-80 seats in the next assembly elections,'' they claimed.
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Belagavi medical institution asks PG doctors to vacate hostel after COVID-19 case

Coronavirus
The Karnataka Association of Resident Doctors condemned the decision.
The Karnataka Association of Resident Doctors has questioned the decision taken by Belagavi Institute of Medical Science to ask its post graduate students to vacate the hostel after one of the students tested positive for coronavirus. "As one of the Post Graduate students has come COVID Positive, here all the inmates are instructed to vacate the Hostel with immediate effect till further orders. This is to prevent the spread of disease to others. They have to arrange for their own accommodation as per the order of the Director," a notice issued to the students by the warden of the hostel stated. The Karnataka Association of Resident Doctors condemned the decision. "Is this the treatment given to healthcare workers who are working tirelessly to fight the spread of COVID-19?" a letter by the association representatives said. The association questioned why the hospital cannot arrange facilities for primary contacts of the COVID-19 patient. In the letter, the association warned the medical institution against forcibly evicting its post-graduate students and asked the hospital to make alternative arrangements. Healthcare workers across the state have tested positive for coronavirus but in most cases, the workers and their contacts are given facilities to quarantine themselves. In most hospitals dealing with COVID-19 cases, healthcare workers are working in cyclical shifts which includes one week of quarantine after completing a one-week shift. The medical institute in Belagavi found itself in the news last week when family members of a COVID-19 patient who passed away set ablaze an ambulance and tried to vandalise the hospital in Belagavi. Belagavi district reported 217 new COVID-19 cases on Friday and the district currently has 2242 active cases. 70 deaths have been reported in the northern Karnataka district while 918 others infected with the virus have made a complete recovery. Karnataka is currently grappling with over 72000 active COVID-19 cases of which 37618 cases are in Bengaluru. The state has reported a sustained spike in cases since July 1 and on Friday, there were over 36,000 COVID-19 tests conducted in the state. Read: Kin of COVID-19 victim allegedly set ablaze ambulance in Karnataka
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