comparemela.com


Informal collectives and access to healthcare during India’s COVID-19 second wave crisis
Format
Background
India was hit by a disastrous second wave of the COVID-19 pandemic that surged since February 2021. The exact magnitude of cases and deaths during this second wave remains a contentious topic, as suggested by huge differences between internal reports of the government and external reports. However, there is no dispute that, although several curbing strategies including a harsh lockdown were introduced during the early days of the pandemic in March 2020, the country now finds itself again in the midst of a crisis. Compared with last year, this time the virus has shown a much higher transmissibility rate, possibly due to a combination of newer variants, coupled with poor regulation and adherence to basic preventive public health measures. Mass gatherings in the form of massive election rallies and religious congregations were also permitted while cases had started increasing exponentially in numerous states of India, and vaccination rates continued to remain low.

Related Keywords

Delhi ,India ,Neha Faruqui ,Maitree Muzumdar ,Sonam Chaturvedi ,Vandana Prasad ,Global Health ,National Capital Region Of Delhi ,Jeevika Shiv ,National Capital Region ,டெல்ஹி ,இந்தியா ,சோனம் சதுர்வேதி ,வந்தனா பிரசாத் ,உலகளாவிய ஆரோக்கியம் ,தேசிய மூலதனம் பகுதி ஆஃப் டெல்ஹி ,ஜீவிகா ஷிவ் ,தேசிய மூலதனம் பகுதி ,

© 2024 Vimarsana

comparemela.com © 2020. All Rights Reserved.