India

Third COVID wave may hit India by October, will remain public health threat for another year: Report

New Delhi: The third wave of coronavirus infections is likely to hit India by October, and the pandemic will remain a public health threat for at least another year, said a group of medical experts surveyed by international news agency Reuters.

According to reports, the June 3-17 snap survey of 40 healthcare specialists, doctors, scientists, virologists, epidemiologists and professors from around the world showed a significant pickup in vaccinations will likely provide some cover to a fresh outbreak.

Of those who ventured a prediction, over 85% of respondents, or 21 of 24, said the next wave will hit by October, including three who forecast it as early as August and 12 in September. The remaining three said between November and February.

But over 70% of experts, or 24 of 34, said any new outbreak would be better controlled compared with the current one, which has been far more devastating – with the shortage of vaccines, medicines, oxygen, and hospital beds – than the smaller first surge in infections last year.

The report quoting, Dr Randeep Guleria, director at All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS), said: “It will be more controlled, as cases will be much less because more vaccinations would have been rolled out and there would be some degree of natural immunity from the second-wave.”

So far, India has only fully vaccinated about 5% of its estimated 950 million eligible population, leaving many millions vulnerable to infections and deaths.

While a majority of healthcare experts predicted the vaccination drive would pick up significantly this year, they cautioned against an early removal of restrictions, as some states have done.

When asked if children and those under 18 years would be most at risk in a potential third wave, nearly two-thirds of experts, or 26 of 40, said yes.

“The reason being they are a completely virgin population in terms of vaccination because currently there is no vaccine available for them,” the survey report quoted Dr Pradeep Banandur, head of epidemiology department at National Institute of Mental Health and Neurosciences (Nimhans), as saying.

As experts warn the situation could become severe, the survey quoting Dr Devi Shetty, a cardiologist at Narayana Health and an advisor to the Karnataka state government on pandemic response planning, said: “If children get infected in large numbers and we are not prepared, there is nothing you can do at the last minute.”

“It will be a whole different problem as the country has very, very few paediatric intensive care unit beds, and that is going to be a disaster.”

As per the survey report, eleven experts said the threat would remain for under a year, 15 said for under two years, while 13 said over two years and two said the risks will never go away.

“Covid-19 is a solvable problem, as obviously it was easy to get a solvable vaccine. In two years, India likely will develop herd immunity through vaccine and exposure of the disease,” said Robert Gallo, director of the Institute of Human Virology at the University of Maryland and international scientific advisor, Global Virus Network.

Meanwhile, India, in the last 24 hours, reported 62,480 COVID cases. Daily recoveries continue to outnumber the daily new cases for the 36th consecutive day as the second wave of infections appears to be ebbing.

 

Free Press Kashmir is now on Telegram. Click here to Join.
FPK Android App for 2G. Click here to Download.

Click to comment
To Top