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What I learnt from fighting COVID-19

By SHOBHA WARRIER
August 03, 2020 10:15 IST

'Social distancing, wearing masks and hygiene should be practised more strictly.'
'People should not assemble in close spaces as the micro droplets may hang in the air and can last for a longer time.'

IMAGE: Recovered patients at the CWG Village COVID care centre near Akshardham in New Delhi, July 23, 2020. Photograph: Kamal Kishore/PTI Photo
 

From the scientific community to the medical community to the community as a whole, every adult on this planet is perplexed, nervous and scared about the coronavirus.

Life in the times of the coronavirus is not the same as it was before it surfaced in Wuhan, China, and thereafter spread to every part of the planet. This is the new normal.

Scientists and medical professionals are learning new things about the virus every day.

Shobha Warrier/Rediff.com speaks to doctors and scientists about their experiences combating the coronavirus.

IMAGE: A laboratory at the Serum Institute of India, the world's largest maker of vaccines, which is working on vaccines against the coronavirus. Photograph: Euan Rocha/Reuters

Dr Rakesh Mishra, Director, Centre for Cellular and Molecular Biology in Hyderabad, and his team discovered a new strain of the novel coronavirus, Clade A3i.

The CCMB scientists found that A3i came not from China or Europe, but from South East Asia and this strain is responsible for around 41% of the cases in India.

Dr Mishra lists what he has learnt about the coronavirus:

IMAGE: Medics undergo a mock-drill to treat COVID-19 patients. Photograph: PTI Photo

Dr Himanshu Reddy Dandu of the King George's Medical University in Lucknow led a team treating coronavirus patients.

In the last three months, Dr Dandu says, the doctors treating covid patients have learnt a lot.

IMAGE: A worker from the Bharatiya Jain Sanghatana, a non-governmental organisation, wearing a 'Smart Helmet', a portable thermoscanner that can measure the temperature of people at a distance, screens residents in a slum in Mumbai, July 23, 2020. Photograph: Hemanshi Kamani/Reuters

Dr Vaibhav Agavane, an epidemiologist who is currently a faculty member at the Institute of Public Health, Bengaluru, told me in March that even asymptomatic patents can spread the coronavirus.

He lists what he has learnt about COVID-19:

 

Feature Presentation: Ashish Narsale/Rediff.com

 

SHOBHA WARRIER / Rediff.com

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