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How Amravati controlled Covid surge

Amravati district in Vidarbha was the first in the state to witness a surge in Covid-19 cases in the second wave

Published on: Apr 15, 2021 12:22 AM IST
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Amravati district in Vidarbha was the first in the state to witness a surge in Covid-19 cases in the second wave. The sudden spike in cases in the second week of February in the district swung the entire state machinery into action, resulting in the imposition of a lockdown and more testing and tracing. The measures helped the machinery bring down the numbers in just four weeks and also set a model, ‘Amravati pattern’, which became a reference point while imposing the stricter curbs, which came into effect on Wednesday night.

HT Image
HT Image

From less than 100 cases daily till January-end, Amravati reported its highest single-day spike of 1,067 cases in the third week of February. The number was rising rapidly in most urbanised pockets of Achalpur and Warud, straining the health infrastructure to a great extent. While cases were rising in other parts of the state steadily, the cases in Amravati were spiralling at a rapid pace. “We were worried as the health machinery was overwhelmed. We tried the weekend curfew, but it did not work, forcing us to go for the complete lockdown for two weeks until March 8. While imposing a lockdown, we also ensured tracing and testing was ramped up multi-fold. It helped us bring down the cases to 292 on March 9 and 241 on April 5. The positivity rate too was brought down to about 10% by then,” said women and child welfare minister and district’s guardian minister Yashomati Thakur. “We planned the lockdown as well as unlocking in a phased manner. Today, Amravati helps other districts like Buldhana and Nagpur and even other spots like Chhindwara in MP to treat critical patients in need of beds with oxygen and ventilators,” Thakur said.

“The number of cases in Amravati has reached the level it was two months ago. The number of cases in the state is expected to start reducing by April-end, two months after the rise began,” said Dr Avinash Supe, head of the state-appointed death audit committee.

 
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Surendra P Gangan

Surendra P Gangan is Senior Assistant Editor with political bureau of Hindustan Times’ Mumbai Edition. He covers state politics and Maharashtra government’s administrative stories. Reports on the developments in finances, agriculture, social sectors among others.

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