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COVID threatens a comeback; key phase in India's fight

Apprehensions are ripe that cases may again begin to rise as the year-old Coronavirus is unpredictable and also because nobody knows for sure as to how long people will remain immune to it.

Sentinel Digital Desk

NEW DELHI: In December-January, it appeared as if Coronavirus was tapering away in India. The three major aspects of the pandemic — the curve of cases, deaths and hospitalisations — which have been fluctuating, suddenly plummeted drastically. Many believed this may be the end of the pandemic, after it destroyed thousands of families and the economy. People began to sense a reprieve, after a year — when they were continuously being cautioned to maintain strict social distancing and wear masks — there may be light at the end of the tunnel and post-pandemic life may begin soon.

But February brought out some harsh realities and dashed hopes that the pandemic was retreating. Scientists believe this is an important phase in the pandemic. Apprehensions are ripe that cases may again begin to rise again as the year-old Coronavirus is unpredictable and also because nobody knows for sure as to how long people will remain immune to it.

In the backdrop of emerging mutations, Prof. N. K. Ganguly, former Director General, Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR), said: "As mutations interact with the natural environment, they are likely to increase transmissibility and also virulence. Mutations and the new strains are endemic — not pandemic. The surge in cases is mostly due to a drop of guard against the virus (non-appropriate COVID behaviour)."

He stressed that decline in cases during the winter season in northern India is not sufficient to conclude that the virus was less active during winters, and indicated that cases might increase in summers, as it happened last year. Ganguly added that Maharashtra and Kerala have never experienced long winters, unlike northern India, yet cases have begun to increase this month. "In Maharashtra, they started train travel and cases increased," he said.

Except Maharashtra and Kerala, after a couple of months of lull, cases have also begun to rise in Karnataka, Telangana, Madhya Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, Delhi, Gujarat and Punjab. The surge in cases has come, after it fell below 10,000 daily in early February, from a peak of over 90,000 cases in September last year.

Many epidemiologists see the most common reason for the spike in some States is that normalcy is returning to people's lives: big weddings, reopening of cinema halls, gyms and swimming pools, crowded markets, people not wearing masks and large political rallies in the election-bound States.

Scientists point out that although there is an aggressive vaccination drive in progress in the country yet it will take a few months to make a dent in the pandemic. Now, the virus is transforming faster than expected, and evolving into variants, which might bypass the immune system.

Director, ICMR-Regional Medical Research Centre, Rajni Kant said that after observing the drop in cases, people became complacent; but, until cases become zero, people should follow COVID-appropriate behaviour seriously. "Mutations are not the reason for the rising cases; instead, the economy has been opened...We don't know how long the immunity will last...Difficult to say, if antibodies are found in people, for how long they will stay, maybe five to six months", added Kant.

He, however, stressed that minor changes in the genome sequence of the virus is not an issue, and there is no need to panic with the emergence of new strains. "COVID is unpredictable, the entire world is struggling against it and it is also difficult to say how many waves will come in future", added Kant.

The immunity against the virus is also a complex issue. People have recovered from either severe or mild infection, after contracting the virus; but, it is difficult to predict as to how long their immunity will last against it; also, as to how long the immunity will last against the new strains.

Epidemiologist Lalit Kant says that there is no explanation for the decline in cases; adding that it has nothing to do with the seasonal changes, as the virus is merely a year-old and not enough is known about it.

"Virus goes into places where it was not present before and when it finds susceptible a population, then its transmission increases. Nearly 50 per cent people in Delhi were exposed to the virus. In case of bad infection, the antibodies may last for four to five months; and maybe less, in case of milder infection", said Kant. He added that after mutations circulate, whichever virus transmits faster, will stay for a longer period. "This period is an important phase; people need to be vigilant, and testing and tracing has to be increased... Scientists say contagious variant first discovered in Britain will become the dominant form of the virus in the US by March-end," he added. (IANS)