38 UK Returnees Test COVID-19 Positive In Delhi; New Strain Detected In Four

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Four persons who recently came to Delhi from the UK and tested positive for COVID-19, have been found infected with the new strain of coronavirus, Health Minister Satyendar Jain confirmed this on Thursday.

Interacting with reporters, he said, a total of 38 people have been found positive since coming to Delhi from the UK recently and kept in a separate institutional isolation unit in the LNJP Hospital premises.

“Four such patients have been found infected with the new UK strain of COVID-19. The persons who came in their contact have been also traced and tested, and it’s not in them. So, only these four cases of a new strain in Delhi so far,” he said.

“Flights have been stopped and those who came before that are being traced and tested rigorously,” he added.

Delhi Fights Covid-19

Delhi recorded 677 COVID-19 cases and 21 new fatalities on Wednesday, even as the positivity rate dropped to 0.8 per cent, authorities said.

“Positivity rate has dropped to 0.8 per cent from 15.26 per cent on November 7. About 85 per cent beds are vacant, so the situation has improved a lot. And, so, it had been decided to make LNJP Hospital and GTB Hospital, partial COVID-19 facilities now. All services, including the OPD will be soon resumed gradually,” Jain said.

On the preparedness for the vaccination, he said, work is on to set up 1,000 vaccination centres.

Jain said the night curfew has been imposed as the situation is under control right now, but huge gatherings could spell trouble again.

Night Curfew Imposed In Delhi To Manage The Covid-19 Spread

The Delhi government has imposed a night curfew from 11 pm to 6 am on December 31 and January 1 to avoid large gatherings during New Year celebrations due to COVID-19 and its highly transmissible UK strain.

A formal order stated that not more than five people will be allowed to assemble at public places in Delhi during night curfew to avoid large gatherings in view of COVID-19.

On COVID-biowaste generation, he said, it is the responsibility of the civic bodies and they are doing it.

Among the mounting concerns over the new variant of the COVID-19, the Delhi government had earlier said that people who had arrived here recently from that country, are being traced and tested, while an institutional quarantine facility has been set up separately for positive cases at the LNJP Hospital.

UK Returnees Are Still Large In Numbers

About 33,000 passengers arrived from the UK at various Indian airports from November 25 to December 23, according to government records. Authorities have begun conducting the gold-standard RT-PCR (reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction) test on these passengers in batches, though tracing all of them is becoming a difficult job with hundreds furnishing vague addresses and switching off their phones.

Those found negative in RT-PCR tests are sent to a seven-day home quarantine, while the genome sequencing of positive samples are done at Insacog labs for the detection of the possible UK variant of Sars-Cov-2, the virus that causes Covid-19.

Those detected with the mutant strain are being kept in single-room isolation in designated health care facilities by states. Their close contacts are also being put in quarantine even as comprehensive contact-tracing has been initiated for co-travelers, family contacts, and others, according to the government.

India also extended the suspension of flights to and from the UK until January 7 from December 31, in a bid to contain the spread of the new strain believed to have been originated in that country.

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