Mission Indradhanush improved child vaccination rates in India
By IANS |
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Mission Indradhanush improved child vaccination rates in India. Image Source: IANS News
New Delhi, July 18 : An estimated 25.5 million children across India were vaccinated under India s Mission Indradhanush (MI) child vaccination campaign during March 2015-July 2017, according to a study.
In December 2014, the Government of India launched MI, with the objective of increasing full immunisation coverage.
MI was a periodic intensification of the routine immunisation (PIRI) programme, which targeted unvaccinated and under-vaccinated children by allocating more resources to underserved areas.
The programme was implemented in 528 districts with low initial full immunisation coverage and high dropout rates in four phases during March 2015-July 2017.
Mujib Mashal and Hari Kumar, The New York Times
Published: 12 Jul 2021 09:30 AM BdST
Updated: 12 Jul 2021 09:30 AM BdST A COVID-19 testing site in Salarpur, India, June 12, 2021. The New York Times
When a devastating second wave of COVID-19 infections reached India’s countryside this spring, the village of Khilwai took immediate action. Two testing centres were set up, and 30 positive cases were isolated. The outbreak was contained with just three deaths. );
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It was a different story in the two villages on either side of Khilwai. Testing remained limited. The local health centre in one village had been closed, its staff sent away to a larger hospital. The coronavirus spread, and at least 30 people in each village died with COVID-19 symptoms.
World News - NEW DELHI: Low pay, 24-hour shifts and severe shortages of staff and protective gear have left many doctors on the front lines of India's brutal pandemic surge near breaking point and fearful for their lives. Coronavirus infections have killed at least 165,000 people in the. Read more at www.tnp.sg
With help of experts, The New York Times analysed case and death counts over time, along with large-scale antibody test results, to arrive at several possible estimates
Antibiotics for Covid-19 cases worsen India’s crisis
Bloomberg
May 26 |
Updated on
May 26, 2021
Fear of missing a secondary infection and lack of specific therapy leading to overprescription: study
Excessive use of the world’s most potent antibiotics has stoked drug-resistant infections in India for years. Now the country’s Covid crisis has put the calamity into hyperdrive.
A first look at how many patients hospitalised during India’s first coronavirus wave also developed bacterial and fungal infections found that a small but alarming proportion harbour germs that resist multiple drugs.
Doctors battling to save lives amid a dearth of effective treatments are turning to the medicines they have on hand often antibiotics that aren’t used in other countries for Covid-19. What’s more, the chaos of overrun hospitals means staff can’t always take precautions to ensure infections don’t spread from one patient to the next.