Social Sciences, asked by singhrambo770, 4 hours ago

write a letter to the Prime Minister of India expressing your concern on the ongoing second wave of covid 19 pandemic in India and suggest At least 3 measures which will help the Government to defeat the covid 19 effectively and efficiently.



plz help​

Answers

Answered by sgokul8bkvafs
0

Answer:

Explanation:

Police officers patrol a desolate Gateway of India monument, Mumbai, April 5, 2021. Photo: Reuters/Niharika Kulkarni/File Photo

If you were to believe irresistible mathematical models from different groups, India will witness unprecedented growth in cases, much more than what it saw in the first wave. Even with a conservative estimate of a 100,000 cases each day in the entire country, we will require 5,000-10,000 beds every day for critical care and the corresponding oxygen supply (assuming 5-10% would require hospitalisation). At this rate, cases will accumulate faster and will cause the health system to collapse.

I must caution that nobody would want to see or dare even to mention such a scenario. I am not an alarmist but belong to a well-meaning public health community that always strives to be prepared for the worst while at the same time hoping that the surge will miraculously disappear. We know that even with a shorter peak, the country struggled to meet critical care, primarily due to the skewed distribution of advanced care.

If the second wave is speeding up the way it is now, what are the policy options before the country?

Over the last few months, the country eased out completely from previous restrictions, with all sectors encouraging borders to reopen. But as of April 2, the Maharashtra government had announced a weekend lockdown and night curfew. Whether this has been done to induce a sense of urgency among the people and to promote COVID-19-appropriate behaviour or with the intention to slow the transmission of the novel coronavirus, with several other states contemplating lockdowns we need to ask ourselves why are we here and what the alternatives could be.

First, the best opportunity to fight India’s COVID-19 epidemic is gone. The basic principle in infectious disease control is to attack the enemy (virus) when it is weak (low transmission season).

To stress this, I wrote on February 5, 2021, that with cases rapidly declining, India needs the 3Cs: coverage of vaccines, containment efforts to limit the spread and continued genetic sequencing. But many states have faltered on all three fronts.

India had a good chance of surviving the first wave with distinct advantages, especially its low mortality rate. To sustain the gains, the country should have enforced strict containment measures, including concurrent monitoring of genome sequences with epidemiological investigations and efforts to curtail the transmission.

There was undoubtedly a sense of indifference to the COVID-19 response in people’s minds. We have already lost some valuable time to respond appropriately to several issues, including scaling up vaccination by making it more straightforward and expanding our basket of choices. What took many months to peak in last year is happening over a few weeks this year. In fact, with 23 states being in the initial part of the ascending phase, the second waves’ peaks will be much higher this time.

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