Odishatv Bureau

New Delhi: With a surge in COVID-19 cases in Odisha, the Union health ministry has said the state to make renewed efforts to contain transmission of the virus and keep case fatality rate below one per cent.

With Odisha imposing lockdown anew, the health ministry emphasised that the restrictions should be utilised to focus on containment, surveillance and testing in containment and buffer zones as the key strategy for early detection of cases and fatality management.

In a letter to Principal Secretaries (Health) and Secretary (Health) of these states, Joint Secretary in the Ministry of Health Lav Agarwal asked them to ensure that at least 80 per cent of the new cases have their close contacts traced and are in quarantine within 72 hours of case confirmation.

The letter underlined that containment and buffer zones should be suitably delineated based on the mapping of cases and contacts, and a list of NCC volunteers along with other workforce is available on COVID warriors' portal which can be optimally utilised in containment and surveillance effort.

"In terms of testing the state should aim to achieve a minimum of 14 tests per one lakh (140 tests per million) per day, while ensuring a positivity rate of less than 10 per cent," the letter to the states read.

The team, comprising Agarwal, Dr S K Singh, Director, National Centre for Disease Control, and Dr Neeraj Nischal, Associate Professor, Medicine at AIIMS New Delhi, will undertake the visit immediately and coordinate with state health authorities to review the existing situation and provide necessary support and guidance.

Odisha is reporting an average of more than 500 cases everyday since the past four weeks, the letter to the state's Principal Secretary (Health and Family Welfare) said.

"According to active case load, Odisha is the tenth most-affected state in the country with Ganjam reporting approximately 37 per cent of the state's active caseload," the letter said, adding, there is need to focus on emerging hotspots such as Nabarangpur, Sambalpur and Kendujhar.

"The increase in weekly fatality trend with almost 29 pc of cases above 45 years, is also a cause of concern," the letter said.

To keep cases fatality rate less than one per cent, weekly case fatality needs to be monitored and the state should conduct rapid audit of hospitals and create dashboards to monitor real time status of bed utilisation, the letter sent to the four states mentioned.

It also asked them to ensure adequate human resources, revamping ambulance system and helplines to ensure resolution of problems of patients experiencing symptoms or undergoing home isolation.

"The Centre of Excellence for Clinical Management should undertake hospital wise/facility-wise fatality analysis and guide facilities with high CFR through regular VC on appropriate clinical management. Required support from 24x7 team set up by AIIMS Delhi for clinical management consultation may also be taken in this context," the letter said.

Necessarily testing all asymptomatic high-risk contacts and mild symptomatic as per ICMR protocol should be undertaken, it said.

The states have also been asked to use the forecasting tools made available by the health ministry to ascertain the number of COVID beds required and accordingly calculate the oxygen requirement.

"A nodal officer to keep a track of oxygen requirements and for relevant communication with the centre is to be appointed," the letter said.

"State should also focus on ensuring availability of non-COVID services such as immunisation, maternal and child health services including other emergency and critical care services," it stated.

(PTI)

Also Read: Odisha’s COVID-19 Death Toll Mounts To 86 With 3 More Fatalities

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