OPDs, elective surgeries to resume in Punjab; govt schools to open from Monday : The Tribune India

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OPDs, elective surgeries to resume in Punjab; govt schools to open from Monday

Amid projections of second wave of Covid, CM Amarinder asks depts to take all precautions

OPDs, elective surgeries to resume in Punjab; govt schools to open from Monday

A worker sanitising a classroom ahead of opening of the school, in Jalandhar. Tribune photo: Malkiat Singh.



Tribune News Service
Chandigarh, October 15

With Covid cases showing a marked decline in the state, Punjab Chief Minister Capt Amarinder Singh on Thursday ordered resumption of normal OPD service and elective surgeries, with extensive precautions in place, but warned against any complacency given the projections of a possible second wave of the pandemic.

The Chief Minister has also allowed opening of government schools from Monday, October 19, after due sanitation and disinfection procedures, and with clear SOPs mandating parents’ consent, as well as ceiling on number of students and hours of operation. 

Some of the private schools in the state have opened today.


Read also: 

Punjab not to open multiplexes, cinema halls and entertainment parks yet

Punjab students may attend schools and institutions only with written consent of parents


Expressing concern over the warnings by health and medical experts of the grave possibility of the second wave hitting the state in the festival season or during the winter months, the Chief Minister directed the departments concerned to take all steps to ensure that things remain under control in the festive times ahead. He asked the Health and Medical Education departments to work with the market committees to ensure widespread distribution of masks with steps to encourage people to wear them, and also follow social distancing norms.

The Chief Minister, who was chairing a virtual review meeting of the Covid situation, also asked the departments to ensure that the medical staff is kept motivated and all vacancies of technicians, etc., are filled up immediately so that normal OPD services and elective surgeries can be carried out seamlessly amid the pandemic situation.

Secretaries of the Health and Medical Research Departments briefed the Chief Minister on the steps being taken to ensure full precautions in OPDs, Wards and Operation Theatres as per SoPs and guidelines for Infection Prevention and Control.

DGP Dinkar Gupta told the meeting said the Punjab Police were gearing up to manage the festival season, during which security would be beefed up and all efforts would be made to ensure strict adherence to Covid norms at marketplaces, Ramlilas, etc. The DGP said the police were also currently focused on handling the increasing number of farmer protests, as well as picketing by BJP and RSS.

According to the DGP, the force had lost 22 personnel to Covid in September, taking the toll to 39. As of date, 434 cops were positive, with an average of 72 cases being reported among the Punjab Police every day during September. However, the figure was now down to about 10.

Even as he termed the decline in positivity rate to 2.60 as a good sign, Dr KK Talwar, head of the state government’s expert advisory committee on health, warned of a second wave hitting Punjab during the festival season. With just about 500 plus cases a day at present, the projections for the next few days were positive, he said, but added that with the spate of upcoming festivals and the fatigue in the health system, Punjab could see the next wave hitting soon.

Citing the incidence of the second wave in various countries, and even in Delhi, Dr Talwar said Punjab should learn lessons from their experience and prepare accordingly. Dr Rajesh Kumar, a member of the Health Department’s Covid Expert group, said that even if the situation remained under control through November, the onset of the winter season could trigger a spurt in cases.

Dr Talwar suggested giving Pulse Oxymeters to Asha workers to enable them to keep a check in their respective areas. He added that teams of experts were being formed to conduct a mortality audit of every hospital to identify gaps, since the fatality rate in the state continued to be high (at 3.1%). This is despite the fact that the recovery rate has gone up from 82% on October 1 to 90.3% as of October 13, when the total number of confirmed cases in the state stood at 1,23,211.

Health Secretary Hussan Lal pointed out that Case Fatality Rate (CFR) was still high at 131 against the national average of 81. He added that to ensure adequate availability of oxygen supply in the coming weeks and months, tendering for first phase for augmenting the supply was in process. The Government of India had fixed the rates of Medical Oxygen, including that of transportation of oxygen cylinders, though liquid oxygen transportation rates were yet to be fixed, he added.


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