Kerala's COVID-19 lessons for India and Modi's government
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[August 26, 2021]
By Krishna N. Das
MALAPPURAM, India (Reuters) - Vilified by
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi's party for its high COVID-19 cases,
Kerala's apparent poor record may actually hold crucial lessons for the
country in containing the outbreak as authorities brace for a possible
third wave of infections.
The opposition-ruled, densely populated southern state is currently
reporting the most number of coronavirus cases in the country and
accounts for the second-highest national tally - unflattering headline
numbers that Modi's Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) has seized upon as a
reflection of bungled local leadership.
However, a Reuters analysis of national and state data, and interviews
with epidemiologists and Kerala health authorities paint a different
picture.
It shows the state's containment measures have helped to catch
infections early, allowing authorities to better manage the illness and
dramatically lower the death rate - a stark contrast to people dying in
carparks and outside hospitals for lack of oxygen and beds in big cities
like Delhi at the height of the health crisis a few months earlier.
"While the federal government may have its views on rapid antigen tests,
it is important to consider that the state's strategies have by and
large succeeded in not just keeping mortality low but also in being able
to detect one in six cases compared to one in 33 nationally," said Rajib
Dasgupta, head of the Centre of Social Medicine & Community Health at
New Delhi’s Jawaharlal Nehru University.
The efficient detection rate and its population density at more than
twice the national average explain the high number of cases in Kerala.
All the same, at 0.5%, Kerala still has the lowest fatality rate among
all but one thinly populated state. The national figure is 1.4% and it
is 1.3% for the country's most populous state, Uttar Pradesh.
The difference comes down to Kerala's reliance on rapid antigen tests to
detect and strictly isolate infected people at home, an approach the
federal health ministry has sharply criticised but which state officials
argue has helped them to better allocate hospital beds and oxygen
supplies for those who really need them.
The government-recommended RT-PCR tests are more accurate but take
longer to produce results, meaning by the time a positive COVID-19 case
is confirmed the infected person is more likely to have developed severe
symptoms and passed it on to others in a vicious cycle of more
infections and deaths.
Kerala's rapid test results allow for early treatment in home isolation
which then narrows the virus' path to infections, state officials say.
These factors, along with the strained medical resources across much of
India, largely explain why the overall national death rate is much
higher than in the Communist-run state.
Kerala officials also say a state-run support service that includes
phone consultation, provision of drugs and pulse oximeters that detect
blood oxygen levels for people recovering at home provide a bulwark in
the battle against the disease.
Delhi had a similar support structure but it collapsed when cases
surged.
"We do have a different model and our fatality rate shows our model is
on the right track," Kerala Health Minister Veena George told Reuters.
But Kerala officials acknowledge that the fast-evolving pandemic can
undo even the best thought-out plans unless authorities remain nimble
and flexible.
A MODEL TO EMULATE?
When Reuters recently visited Kerala's most populous Malappuram
district, which is reporting the greatest number of infections in India,
a quarter of the 344 COVID beds in its biggest hospital were vacant and
oxygen supply was ample.
The Indian Council of Medical Research has recommended lockdowns
for districts where more than 10% of the tests return positive results.
The rate is about 15% for Kerala and even higher in Malappuram, but
shops and restaurants are open for business.
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A general view of the Government Medical College Hospital in Manjeri,
in the Malappuram district of the southern state of Kerala, India.
August 18, 2021. Picture taken August 18, 2021. REUTERS/Krishna N.
Das
Kerala officials argue that they are able to keep
businesses open as the state has the best testing rate among Indian
states - 86 tests per 100 people, compared with about 33 in Uttar
Pradesh https://www.covid19india.org/state/UP - meaning they are
able to catch infections early and ensure timely treatment.
The model, epidemiologists say, can be replicated in few other
states with good health facilities, such as neighbouring Tamil Nadu.
"Their surveillance is good, they detect cases early and their
testing is very focused," M.D. Gupte, a retired director of the
National Institute of Epidemiology who advises the federal
government on immunisations, said about Kerala.
"Most people in Kerala are educated, so that helps."
India’s daily demand for medical oxygen jumped more than eight times
in May from pre-pandemic levels, but Kerala avoided major shortages
of hospital beds and oxygen that crippled many states when
nationwide infections saw an explosive surge.
The federal health ministry did not respond to emails requesting
comment.
VACCINE PUSH
Minister George said the state was on course to administer at least
one vaccine dose to all adults by next month, the fastest pace among
all states. Currently, the state has covered more than 55% of adults
with at least one vaccine dose, compared with 48% for the whole of
India, which wants to vaccinate all its adults by December.
Kerala, with 35.5 million people, has so far reported 3.8 million
infections, or 12% of India's total of 32.5 million. Its 19,757
deaths, however, account for only 4% of the overall nationwide
fatalities.
The Indian government recommends 70% of all COVID-19 tests be
carried out by the RT-PCR method, while Kerala's rate is less than
50%.
"This is not the Kerala model, this is a model of mismanagement,"
BJP President Jagat Prakash Nadda, India's former health minister,
said last week.
He said BJP-ruled Uttar Pradesh and Madhya Pradesh had better
managed the pandemic, though a government survey estimated in July
that more than 70% residents of both states had been exposed to the
virus. The figure was 44% for Kerala.
Kerala's COVID-19 hospitalisation rate is only about 3%, a state
official said, compared with more than 5% nationwide when
cases peaked in May.
T.S. Anish, a member of Kerala's COVID Expert Committee, said the
state was now focused on vaccination.
"If you are able to vaccinate large numbers, you will get infections
but your health system will not be overwhelmed."
(Reporting by Krishna N. Das; Additional reporting by Chris Thomas
and Jose Devasia; Editing by Shri Navaratnam)
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