How earlier India faced deadly viruses, apart from COVID-19
How India faced deadly viruses apart from COVID-19
NEW DELHI, 25 MARCH 2020
Cruel
Coronavirus was first reported to the World Health Organization (WHO) from
the Wuhan city of China on December 31-2019. Since then, the virus has brought
the entire world in a lockdown situation and India is no different. However,
this is not the first time that India has faced a dreaded virus - the country
has faced new viruses since the time of H1NI (Swine
Flu), Nepah, Zeka and Ebola earlier.
On Wednesday, there are 562
total confirmed cases and ten casualties of novel
coronavirus. "India started thermal screening on the earmarked
aerobridges from January 17, even before the WHO said" the Union Health
Minister Harshvardhan had said in Parliament. Gradually, in phases, the country
closed its borders in order to contain the disease for COVID- 19 affected
countries such as China, Thailand, Singapore, Malaysia, Iran and others too.
How-India-faced-deadly-viruses-earlier-apart-from-COVID-19
The India has successfully
evacuated over a thousand people from the corona- affected parts of the world so
far. Currently, the entire country is in lockdown for the next 21 days i.e. Up to
14 April 2020, starting from Wednesday, as advised by the Prime Minister Narendra
Modi on Tuesday 24 march 2020.
Earlier in 2009 another strain
of virus was first reported in April that year from Mexico, which spread
globally, including India, through transmission when a 23-year-old entered
India from New York. Declared a pandemic by the WHO in 2009, H1N1 is now a
seasonal infection that usually occurs every year with two peaks - January to
March and July to September. We have overcome of it to safe our countrymen.
At that time, it affected
cities such as Pune, Mumbai and Delhi. From Meghalaya to Jalandhar, Bangalore
to Lucknow, Hyderabad to Ajmer, Jammu to Thiruvananthapuram and Varanasi to Vadodara
and so on - cases grew rapidly.
In that year 2009, the
government had shut down schools and offices as the age cluster for the disease
was 15 to 45 years. And we controlled all worst situations.
Next in 2018, the WHO had
recommended a Quadrivalent vaccine (vaccine with four strains). This vaccine is
available in the Indian market now for all to safeguard you.
Further another of its kind
the Nipah virus was heard from Kerala. Large fruit bats of the 'genus petrous'
are the natural reservoirs of NiV. As of July 17 in 2018 a total of 19 Nipah
virus (NiV) cases, including 17 deaths were reported from Kerala State - 18 of
them were laboratory-confirmed.
That outbreak was localized
to two districts in Kerala
Kozhikode
and Malappuram districts were locked down at that time. No new cases or deaths
have been reported since June 1, 2018 and as of 30 July; human-to-human
transmission of NiV has been contained in Kerala. The outbreak was first
reported on May 31 in 2018. Due to strict and robust government measures, it
did not reach outside Kerala and was contained there itself. It was also
controlled by our experts.
How India faced deadly viruses apart
from COVID-19
In May 15, 2017, the Union
Health Ministry reported three laboratory-confirmed cases of Zika virus disease
in Bapunagar area in Ahmedabad, Gujarat caused by a virus transmitted primarily
by aedes mosquitoe which bites during the day, Zika virus disease during
pregnancy can cause infants to be born with microcephaly and other congenital
malformations, known as congenital Zika syndrome and other complications of
pregnancy including preterm birth and miscarriage also.
The Indian Council of Medical
Research (ICMR) had tested 34233 human samples and 12647 mosquito
samples for the presence of Zika virus that time. Among those, close to 500
mosquito samples were collected from Bapunagar area, Ahmedabad District in
Gujarat and were found negative for Zika virus.
That virus was first
identified in Uganda in 1947 in monkeys and was later identified in humans in
1952. Later, cases were reported from America, Africa and Brazil also. A total
of 86 countries and territories have reported evidence of mosquito-transmitted
Zika virus infection.
Earlier in 2014, the spread of
the deadliest virus- Ebola loomed large on the country.
In October 11 in 2014, an
Indian woman, serving in Liberia as a UN peacekeeper was isolated on arrival
after she was found with "Ebola-like symptoms." That time the Indian
government had installed thermal scanners and other virus tracking
equipment at 18 airports in country. Passengers who showed Ebola like symptoms
were kept in isolation wards in hospitals and given proper treatment and
treated well.
The fruit bats are considered
as natural hosts for Ebola virus. The disease is 90% fatal. An experimental
Ebola vaccine proved highly protective against EVD in a major trial in Guinea
in 2015.
Moreover, there are many more
viruses the country continues to struggle with such as dengue, chikungunya,
japanese encephalitis, to name a few. For that our government is working day
and night to control all situations like coronavirus too.
0 Comments
You are welcome to comment, share us on Pinterest, Facebook, Instagram, Linkedin and Twitter
Emoji