x

Like our Facebook Page

   
Early Times Newspaper Jammu, Leading Newspaper Jammu
 
Breaking News :   Wealth getting concentrated in hands of some rich: Gadkari | Srinagar records highest July temperature at 37.4 degrees | Satish Sharma monitors Shri Amarnathji Yatra convoy accident; ensures swift relief, medical response | Ensure quick resolution of public complaints: CM Yogi | DM visits Pargwal, reviews functioning of Revenue Department | Sakeena Itoo visits Nadimarg area | Waqf employees felicitate Dr Andrabi | Ajaz Jan visits District Hospital Poonch to Review Doctor Quarters, Identify Sites for Hospital Bunkers | Danger Looms in Udhampur: Unprotected Transformers Spark Safety Concerns | Sat Sharma releases "Raidass Vandana" aarti dedicated to Guru Ravidass | Kavinder meets former Jaipur Mayors, urges to join Amarnath Yatra | AIIMS Jammu Launches Neurosurgical Operative Services with Brain Tumor Surgery | Illegal structures used for bovine dumping demolished in Khanpura | I Hope To Live For 30-40 Years more: Dalai Lama | Election Commission holding regular dialogue with parties | Himachal becomes first state to launch Aadhaar-based face authentication | Interpretation Of Law, Constitution Has To Be Pragmatic: CJI Gavai | Rotary Club Jammu Elite celebrates Annapurna Day with Spirit of Service | 3 theft cases solved; 6 accused arrested | Director Forest Protection Force starts plantation drive | Two tractors seized for illegal mining | Javid Dar visits Nunwan base camp; inaugurates Waste Management facility | Bovine smuggling bid foiled; 5 bovines rescued | Railway Protection Force Bhopal takes swift action, accused arrested | 3-day Shri Sarthal Devi Ji Yatra culminates with Grand Shobha Yatra, Maha Yagya | SMVD Narayana Hospital performs Bilateral Knee Replacements in 88 years old patients | Doda police reunites mentally unsound person with his family | Free medical check-up camp organized | Directorate of Ayush mourns sad demise of Dr Tahir Mufti | 84 Bn CRPF helped in rescuing injured pilgrims of Shri Amarnath Ji Yatra | Renowned Heart Surgeon Dr Pankaj Goel joins Amandeep Group of Hospitals | Director Agriculture inaugurates Commercial Vermicompost Unit under HADP | Ravinder leads Congress protest in Sunderbani against SCARD bank , discrimination in road projects | Century of Sangh: RSS plans major outreach in J&K during Shatabdi celebrations | GOC interacts with veterans | Implement comprehensive safety measures for vehicles of pilgrims: LG Sinha to officers | 36 devotees sustain minor injuries after 5 buses collide in Ramban | ‘Op Sindoor Impact’: Bilawal Bhutto signals Pak’s willingness to hand over dreaded terrorists to India | Vijay Khanmotra elected Chairman Samba Photographers Union | CM Omar pays glowing tributes to Karbala martyrs | SIA files chargesheet in cross-border narco-terror case | Udhampur police seized 9 vehicles | Indian Army concludes Self Defense Training Workshop at Mendhar | Police register case over attempt to provoke unrest | Samba police seizes 4 dumpers for illegal mining | Nagrad deferred election | Decision on summer vacation extension today: Sakina Itoo | J&K Police attaches property | VC JU releases book “Happy Schools” emphasizing emotional well-being as core to education | ABRSM declares Kuldeep Kumar as new President of Zone Jourian | Parkash Purab of Sri Guru Hargobind Sahib Ji Celebrated with Devotion | NC felicitates newly appointed Additional Spokespersons | DBU hosts FDP on emerging AI tools for Agriculture Scientists and Educators | Sunil Dimple demands bill for restoration of Dogra State | MCM celebrates Vanmahotsav with plantation drive under 'Ek Paed Maa ke Naam' | Children and parents in digital fasting may be away from these technical means | Temple of learning? | Preventing Zoonotic Diseases: A Shared Responsibility | Divine Grace in Sacred Himalayas | Back Issues  
 
news details
The second wave of Coronavirus in rural areas
5/16/2021 11:22:17 PM

Vijay GarG

It is easy to overlook rural India with about 900 crore people (65% of India’s population). Neglecting rural India’s second wave will be a monumental error in terms of lives and livelihoods that will be lost. We hear that in some Northern states, every second or third rural household has at least one death due to Covid-19.
This disparity in healthcare services will exacerbate the loss of life in rural India. We need to act very quickly to prevent rapid spread and save lives by creating makeshift healthcare facilities to care for the sick in rural India.
We have a crucial few days before the rural component of the second wave becomes a major medical disaster—an opportunity to plan and implement an effective preventive programme to minimise its rural impact.
Right from the beginning of the pandemic in India, our greatest failure has been our inability to properly utilise a simple, readily available, cost-effective preventive tool—the social vaccine—to inform and provide specific education through effective communication strategy to all Indians and enable everyone to adopt Covid-appropriate behaviour. This means a complete cessation of all gatherings, meetings and congregations, everyone wearing a fitting face mask, maintaining a physical distance of one metre from others, avoiding physical contact with others, practicing cough etiquette and frequent hand washing. Even now, this is the only tool that we can readily deploy to reduce rural spread and save lives.
This requires mobilising our entire population, initiating a massive publicity blitz by all influential people who hold sway over the public—politicians, actors, sportspersons, acclaimed medical professionals and administrators. Every TV channel in every Indian language should carry these messages repeatedly during prime time to drive the message home. Education of the public should be the responsibility of the district administration, gram panchayats, healthcare workers, civil society opinion leaders, teachers, voluntary organisations and philanthropic institutions. Mobile phones, which have a wide reach in rural India, can be utilised to spread messages and short educational video clips about Covid-prevention strategies in regional languages. This step will have a major impact.
A large number of migrant workers who returned to cities and towns after the first wave are migrating back to the villages—seeking rural employment—as judged by the big demand for inclusion in the MNREGA programme. This is a quiet and silent process now—very different from what happened after the initial lockdown during March-April 2020. This migration is triggering multiple chains of virus transmission in rural India by the highly infectious variants of the second wave. Further urban to rural transmission should be quickly curbed by setting up temporary quarantine shelters and providing food for migrant labourers, where they can stay for two weeks before mingling with the rural folk. This time period can be used to vaccinate this vulnerable group.
If urban India, with its numerous public and private healthcare facilities, faces a huge oxygen deficit, one can imagine the plight of rural India with its meagre infrastructure. Innovative ideas to make oxygen available to rural India would be a priority and a challenge. Large numbers of portable oxygen concentrators, to be deployed at hospitals and even homes when required, should be made available to each district collector. Uninterrupted power supply should be ensured to enable continuous functioning of life-saving medical equipment.
The panic associated with the second wave has already made people understand the importance of vaccination. The details of the 16 crore first dose vaccine recipients, 2.5 crore second dose recipients, the 1,05,69,113 proven infections and 78,317 documented deaths (from 14 February 2021 to 6 May 2021) during the second wave—all available in a computerised database with the Aadhaar number as the identifier—can be analysed. A comparison of the proportions of new infections, serious disease and deaths in those partially (one dose) or fully (two doses) vaccinated, with the same proportions in unvaccinated individuals, updated on a daily basis, can be conveyed to the general public in easily understandable terms. This will inform the public about the efficacy and safety of both vaccines. This single step will help dispel vaccine hesitancy.
Equitable and efficient vaccination of rural masses demands concerted, decentralised action by gram panchayats; they should actively involve all stakeholders—healthcare workers, civil society opinion leaders, industries, teachers, voluntary and philanthropic organisations—and quickly organise inoculation camps in each village. While governments (state and Central) undertake to supply vaccines for this mammoth task, each village panchayat should ensure the smooth conduct of the inoculation programme without wastage.
Tough days are ahead but if we act quickly and on a war footing, we can still mitigate the impact of a major medical disaster in rural India.
  Share This News with Your Friends on Social Network  
  Comment on this Story  
 
 
 
Early Times Android App
STOCK UPDATE
  
BSE Sensex
NSE Nifty
 
CRICKET UPDATE
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
   
Home About Us Top Stories Local News National News Sports News Opinion Editorial ET Cetra Advertise with Us ET E-paper
 
 
J&K RELATED WEBSITES
J&K Govt. Official website
Jammu Kashmir Tourism
JKTDC
Mata Vaishnodevi Shrine Board
Shri Amarnath Ji Shrine Board
Shri Shiv Khori Shrine Board
UTILITY
Train Enquiry
IRCTC
Matavaishnodevi
BSNL
Jammu Kashmir Bank
State Bank of India
PUBLIC INTEREST
Passport Department
Income Tax Department
JK CAMPA
JK GAD
IT Education
Web Site Design Services
EDUCATION
Jammu University
Jammu University Results
JKBOSE
Kashmir University
IGNOU Jammu Center
SMVDU