India saw nearly 87,000 Covid-19 cases this week, second wave fear looms
India reported close to 87,000 cases of the coronavirus disease (Covid-19) in the last seven days, with the highest addition on Sunday when the country saw 14,264 fresh infections within a span of 24 hours.
The spike of 86,711 Covid-19 cases comes amid concerns about laxity in the safety protocols enforced by the government to prevent infection spread and it has prompted many states to reinforce stricter rules.
The country had registered 18,855 infections on January 29 but the tally had dipped after that, showing that India’s grip on Covid-19 handling was in control.
An analysis by HT this week shows that three states and one Union Territory have seen their seven-day averages of daily Covid-19 cases rise by between 20% and 69% of lows seen after the end of the first wave of the pandemic.
Flagged as areas of concern by the Union ministry of health and family welfare on Tuesday, Kerala and Maharashtra have contributed the highest number of cases, forcing authorities to be on guard. Maharashtra chief minister moved swiftly to enforce a lockdown in some parts of the state after a spike in the number of daily new cases. The state accounts for the highest number of daily new cases in the country. On Saturday, it reported 6,112 daily new cases.
The importance of adherence to Covid-19 appropriate behavior is strongly reiterated for breaking the chain of transmission of the virus and containment of the spread of the disease, the health ministry said on Saturday, signalling citizens to be cautious.
This rise has coincided with the detection of the two mutations of the Sars-CoV-2 virus in India.
Scientists fear this can make vaccines less effective and trigger re-infections. India now has all three coronavirus variants that have caused a massive resurgence of cases globally — B.1.1.7, first discovered in the United Kingdom; B.1.351, dominant in South Africa; and P.1, from Brazil. These have a unique collection of mutations, which make them spread more readily or cheat vaccine-immunity.
Experts have warned against complacency, underlining that a tepid outlook towards disease spread will undo months of progress and sacrifices made in the fight against the disease.