Corona times 2020 -20. Good news for some and positive analysis about Karnataka. Also some pragmatic advice
Good news is that Bangalore Golf Club allows 65+ aged members to play golf! No matter I am unable to play for the present. It is a positive sign. Hope there will be more.
Tara's uncle, Anand Kumar sent me another link.
It was good to hear an experienced well known Bangalore doctor being so hopeful.
Anand had earlier sent me a link to an article which looked at the Covid from a very different angle.
A few extracts from the article with very sensible advice on how to deal with this pandemic!
(which should be repeated often. full article is also enclosed at the end!)
Corona Control in India – The Facts. Madhav G Deo MD; PhD. President
Moving Academy of Medicine and Bio-medicine, Pune
News media has given a wrong publicity creating a very gloomy picture. People are terrified and feel that Yamraj (Death God) is waiting outside every house.There are other problems created by the lock down. Because of the pandemic, patients of other disorders are ignored. For example, during seven weeks of the pandemic, normally there would have been some 10,000 cardiac by-pass surgeries, many of them are now categorized as elective surgeries, and therefore postponed.
Patient-Oriented Clinical Model:
Covid 19 has come to stay with humans. It will soon become a part of the repositories of the human pathogenic viruses, just like what happened to H1N1, and produce only a sporadic disease (viral pneumonia) especially in senior citizens. The patient-oriented strategies are best suited to deal with Sporadic cases.
Therefore, as a part of the Corona control measures, India should also develop, simultaneously, a patient- oriented module that involves several issues. ( See the full article!)
The first and foremost is where should the corona patient be admitted - in a general or infectious disease hospital?
Should there be special hospitals established for Corona disease?
Specific instruction for disposal of dead patient should be defined.
( There are two important issues, one is on the use of ventilators and second on how should senior citizen 'pneumonia' patients be treated?)
The following is very important. The media hype has created unwittingly a monster called the Coronavirus disease. Patients are so castigated that others shun hospitals that are admitting them. There is a misconception that if you are just lab test positive it is an end of the world for you. People are afraid of even touching a dead corona patient. This needs to be immediately corrected, lest designated colonies may be created for them, that needs to be avoided at all cost.
Given the challenge, India’s globally recognised medical expertise could develop a suitable patient-oriented model. This is a golden opportunity for India to create scientific history by creating an Indian patient-oriented clinical model (made in India) that will be used by other nations where the disease is either mild or sporadic.
Wonder how many saw the video attached to my last blog-19.
It was a bizarre manifesto ( I could not see the original on Web. Probably withdrawn.)
One advice for the government is to grab all private property, money etc., and fund it for the 'India Rescue' act! A cocktail of communism and emergency for India. It could even be a diabolical advice as there may not be many options left if the pandemonium continues for long.
---------------------------------00000--------------------------------------000000-------------------------
Tara's uncle, Anand Kumar sent me another link.
"Have you heard Dr.Devi Shetty's opinion on COVID19?"
https://www.facebook.com/ndtv/videos/270322864346795/It was good to hear an experienced well known Bangalore doctor being so hopeful.
Anand had earlier sent me a link to an article which looked at the Covid from a very different angle.
A few extracts from the article with very sensible advice on how to deal with this pandemic!
(which should be repeated often. full article is also enclosed at the end!)
Corona Control in India – The Facts. Madhav G Deo MD; PhD. President
Moving Academy of Medicine and Bio-medicine, Pune
News media has given a wrong publicity creating a very gloomy picture. People are terrified and feel that Yamraj (Death God) is waiting outside every house.There are other problems created by the lock down. Because of the pandemic, patients of other disorders are ignored. For example, during seven weeks of the pandemic, normally there would have been some 10,000 cardiac by-pass surgeries, many of them are now categorized as elective surgeries, and therefore postponed.
Patient-Oriented Clinical Model:
Covid 19 has come to stay with humans. It will soon become a part of the repositories of the human pathogenic viruses, just like what happened to H1N1, and produce only a sporadic disease (viral pneumonia) especially in senior citizens. The patient-oriented strategies are best suited to deal with Sporadic cases.
Therefore, as a part of the Corona control measures, India should also develop, simultaneously, a patient- oriented module that involves several issues. ( See the full article!)
The first and foremost is where should the corona patient be admitted - in a general or infectious disease hospital?
Should there be special hospitals established for Corona disease?
Specific instruction for disposal of dead patient should be defined.
( There are two important issues, one is on the use of ventilators and second on how should senior citizen 'pneumonia' patients be treated?)
The following is very important. The media hype has created unwittingly a monster called the Coronavirus disease. Patients are so castigated that others shun hospitals that are admitting them. There is a misconception that if you are just lab test positive it is an end of the world for you. People are afraid of even touching a dead corona patient. This needs to be immediately corrected, lest designated colonies may be created for them, that needs to be avoided at all cost.
Given the challenge, India’s globally recognised medical expertise could develop a suitable patient-oriented model. This is a golden opportunity for India to create scientific history by creating an Indian patient-oriented clinical model (made in India) that will be used by other nations where the disease is either mild or sporadic.
Wonder how many saw the video attached to my last blog-19.
It was a bizarre manifesto ( I could not see the original on Web. Probably withdrawn.)
One advice for the government is to grab all private property, money etc., and fund it for the 'India Rescue' act! A cocktail of communism and emergency for India. It could even be a diabolical advice as there may not be many options left if the pandemonium continues for long.
---------------------------------00000--------------------------------------000000-------------------------
Corona Control in India – The Facts
Madhav G Deo MD; PhD
President
Moving Academy of
Medicine and Biomedicine, Pune
Mobile 9922403266
Fax: No fax
Summary
Covid
19has devasted the world since it was declared as a pandemic by the WHO in the
second week of March 2020. It has already affected some 3 million people of
which two hundred thousand are dead. However, the pandemic is uneven in
severity. Some 15 Nations, mostly from Western Europe and the US together
account for 88% cases and 92% deaths respectively. On the other hand, the total
cumulative cases and deaths, so far, in Africa and Oceania are less than their
daily number in the US and some European Nations. So mild is the pandemic in
some Nations that it should be no health problem for them. In general, Covid 19
is more sever in developed Nations. The exact underlying mechanism for this
unevenness is not known. It is believed that this may be due to earlier
exposure to cross reacting antigens more prevalent in the challenging
environmental hygiene in the third world. There could be other explanations. It
is unscientific to categorize every RT-PCR positive person as a case (patient).
Wrong media hype, which has terrified people to the extent that everyone thinks
thatYamraj is standing outside his/her home, should end
immediately. It has resulted in stigmatisation of even just the lab positive
cases, although 95% of them would completely recover and lead a normal life
subsequently. Progressively sharp rising number of cases and deaths, in the
face of the ‘lock down’, suggests that the modality has not been very
effective. Nations without the lock
down, if at all, have done better. Just like the H1N1, Covid 19, will soon
become a part of repository of the human pathogenic viruses producing sporadic
cases. It is necessary that we develop, urgently, a strategy to handle these
cases. India, where the pandemic is mild, will make a scientific history by
developing patient-oriented, made in India clinical model that
will be used Universally. It is time that we take a positive and realistic view
of the Covid 19.
Background:
The storm Covid-19 hit the world on March 11,
when the WHO declared it as a pandemic1. Although
devastating, its severity is very uneven. Seven weeks after the declaration,
just 15 highly developed Nations, mostly from the Western Europe and the US,
together account for 88% and 92% of total cases and deaths due to Covid 19,
respectively2. These Nations have been hot spots right from
the beginning. However, the pandemic is mild in rest of the world, so mild that
for some Nations it may not be a health issue at all. Globally, more than fifty
percent of the 212 Nations, where the pandemic stated, have not even one extra
death per day due to Covid 19 and there is no death at all in 40 Nations. The number
of the cumulative cases and deaths in the two continents- Africa and Oceania-
taken together is far less than their daily new numbers occurring in the US and
some Nations of Western Europe2.
WHO’s definition of a pandemic, evolved around influenza, says “An influenza pandemic occurs when a new influenza virus appears against
which the human population has no immunity, resulting in epidemics worldwide
with enormous numbers of deaths and illness”.3 Therefore, theCovid
19 could not have been classified as a pandemic. as
there are a large number of Nations where the death toll is miniscule or no
deaths at all. However, the definition,
which was followed till the 2009 H1N1 pandemic, was modified and the last two requirements (illness and death) were dropped.
Neither of them is any more a requirement for a pandemic. It is alleged that
the modifications were done under pressure from the drug and vaccine lobbies4,5
Interestingly, Covid 19 was declared as a pandemic in 114 Nations, despite
the WHO knowing, that the test (RT-PCR), which formed the basis of the
diagnosis, could not be confirmed in 30% cases; also, 80% Nations had no deaths6.
Symptoms of the Covid 19 are very vague and
non-specific. The diagnosis is based entirely on a positive RT-PCR, a test for
the presence of some viral genes. The test is
very expensive and used mostly as a research tool in the developing Nations. It
requires skills and special training. In infectious disorders a positive
laboratory test does not always mean the disease. For example, a very large
majority (even 95%) of healthy Indians are tuberculin positive, an indicator of
only the exposure to M tuberculosis.
But that does not mean that those who are tuberculin positive are all TB
patients. Malarial parasite is another good example. In hyperendemic areas, some
normal persons may even show parasites in their blood. Even in the case of
Covid 19, a large majority with a positive RT-PCR completely recovers. They
should not be classified as patients (cases). The test, therefore, has limited
public health utility. It should be a good research tool to study biology of
the Corona disease.
Pneumonia, a serious clinical manifestation, occurs only in a very small
proportion of Covid 19 cases; mostly in senior citizens. Otherwise, as stated
above, 95% of cases completely recover needing no medical attention. Currently,
there are no clinical or laboratory predictive markers that could identify
those who will develop clinically significant disease. Therefore, to assess the
health burden of Covid 19 just on the basis of a positive lab test has many
problems. (a) As only a small proportion develops clinically significant
symptoms, the disease burden will be unnecessarily increased many folds. Since
there are no predictive markers, the lab positive person will have to be regularly
monitored that will unnecessarily raise the cost of health care and (b) Covid
19 will soon become another environmental human pathogen, just like the H1N1,
and continue to infect fresh people with the result that there will be always a
lab test positive person in the community. Therefore, the number of positives
will never reach zero. Even one RT-PCR positive caseappears to be enough to declare
a disorder as a pandemic. When Covid 19 was declared as a pandemic by the WHO, 16%
affected Nations had only one positive case that too mostly imported6.
Thus, the pandemic will never end and the lock down will be indefinite, which
is just humanly impossible. There is a need for a pragmatic approach. Focus
only on clinically sick Covid19 patients requiring hospitalization.
Comparative international Picture:
In the first two weeks (up to March 24), hardly
any preventive measures were taken and the virus had virtually a ‘free run’. It
was assumed that all Nations will be equally and badly affected. However, this
was not so. As mentioned earlier, ferocity of the pandemic grossly differed
from Nation to Nation. The US had 42164 cases and 471 deaths 7.
On the other hand, the Indian figures were extremely low, just two per cent of
the US. The picture viewed per million population, which makes comparison more
meaningful, is no different. As the disease progressed, the differences became
more glaring. So vast are the differences that it looks as if the two pandemics
are caused by two different strains of Covid-19. The huge geographic distance between India
and the US would favour the idea. However, the theory cannot explain the
differences between the US and Mexico, which share a large porous border. Like
in India, the Covid 19 is mild in the latter. The most
likely explanation is that both the Indians and Mexicans havea much better host
defense than the Americans against Covid-19.
The US is a
‘Highly Developed’ Nations, whereas India and Mexico are both developing
Nations which have huge population of slum dwellers. In some major cities, like
Mumbai (India), as much as 50% of its population lives in slums, which are
often next door to sophisticated high-rise buildings8.
Sanitation is a major challenge in slums. The unhygienic environmental
conditions would favor growth of numerous organisms which in turn could offer
cross protection against novel infections. There could be other explanations
too. It is well known
that people in the developing world are more resistant to common infections as
compared to the developed world.If this were
true, the slum dwellers should have better defense than the better off people.
The data from
the 2009 H1N1 flu pandemic, in India, support this view. The pandemic affected 10193 people resulting in 1035 deaths. However, the flu was
very mild in slum dwellers. Of the 40
swine flu deaths, only two (5%) were in the slum dwellers in Pune where 40%
people live in slums9,10. This would also explain why the Covid-19 is milder in the developing Nations where environmental hygiene
is poor. There appears to be some sort
of common defense mechanism against the two viruses, as the Covid 19 and H1N1
maps can be superimposed, epidemiologically.
New
Zealand, although classified as a highly developed Nation, has low incidence of
Covid 19. It was, also, the Nation where H1N1 epidemic was very mild11.
Population based seroprevalence
studies showed that substantial proportion of its society had pre-existing
protective antibodies against H1N1 across age groups, an indication that the population
was exposed to H1N1 or related antigens12. It is well established that antigenic
stimulationsimultaneously generates immunological memory. It is tempting to
suggest that stimulation of the memory cells by the cross reacting Covid 19
antigens have provided protection against the virus in the New Zealanders
Control
Approaches
There is no doubt that Covid 19 has been
devastating in some major highly developed Nations. By now about two hundred
thousand people are dead. What is equally disturbing is that it has caused
unnecessary Social havoc in many other Nations, where the epidemic is even
mild. A positive RT-PCR test is wrongly dubbed as the disease, which, according
to media, has caused deluge. The hype has been supported by the questionable
preventive measures such as lock down, various color zones and even the worst,
the complete sealing of the area with a positive case. These are, if at all,
solutions for the law and order problems and not for infectious diseases. The fact that a large majority of the
positive cases and a large proportion of the affected patients completely recover
is mentioned in the media, if at all, in a very low tone. The main message,
which is repeated ad nauseum, is loud and clear that is a lab test
positive person is a dangerous case of
the Covid 19. The wrong hype has resulted in stigmatization of a person even
with just a positive test. Even a completely recovered patient may face social
ostracization at home. If not properly handled, on time, it will result in
social unrest, which all Nations would like to avoid.
The preventive strategy, obviously, has to be
proportional to the ferocity of the disease. The doctrine ‘one size fits all’
is not applicable to the Corona pandemic. Two popular approaches are the
National lock down, which, in essence, keep every person house-bound and closes
almost all shops to prevent intermingling of the people. This is the virus
(Covid 19) centric approach, focused on prevention of its spread. The other
approach is host centric. It allows free mixing of people and promotes herd
immunity. All activities are normal. The sick’s are treated as usual in
hospitals.
In the third week of March, many countries, mostly in Europe and a few outside, went for
the lock down, which, on paper, is very appealing as a preventive measure to
stop the spread of the pandemic 13. The nature of the lock
down differed from Nation to Nation. However, there has been no stopping; the
number of patients is progressively increasing everywhere. For example, even 5
weeks (April 27) after the lock down was enforced, the cases increased 22-fold
(800926) and deaths 100-fold (40073) in the US7,14. This
pattern is seen everywhere without exception and raises serious doubts about
the practical utility of this extreme step. India has yet another problem;
every 5th person is a slum dweller15. Slums the
very crowded so much so that a 10ft x10ft room is shared by 8-10 people. Execution of the lockdown is simply
impossible in democracy. The argument that the purpose of the lock down is just
to prolong the event to enable the health authorities to reorganise the control
measures, like making more beds available for hospitalisation etc, does not
hold water especially in Nations, like India, where the pandemic is mild.
Of the well-developed Nation Sweden is an
exception16. Its strategy is based on development of a robust
herd immunity that will be a permanent solution both for the present and future
pandemics. Unlike other European Nations, it has not imposed lock down and
allowed free mixing of the people many of them could be infected. It has in
fact done much better than the US which has imposed lock down right in the
beginning. Five weeks later, the number
of cases increased 22-fold and only 9-fold in the US and Sweden respectively, a
clear indication that the lock down has not been effective.
In India, the Covid 19 death toll cumulatively
is very low, only about 900. Yet, the News media has given a wrong publicity
creating a very gloomy picture. People are terrified and feel that Yamraj
(Death God) is waiting outside every house.There are other problems
created by the lock down. Because of the pandemic, patients of other disorders
are ignored. For example, during seven weeks of the pandemic, normally there
would have been some 10,000 cardiac by-pass surgeries, many of them are now
categorized as elective surgeries, and therefore postponed17.
Patient-Oriented Clinical Model
Covid 19 has come to stay with humans. It will soon become a part of the
repositories of the human pathogenic viruses, just like what happened to H1N1,
and produce only a sporadic disease (viral pneumonia) especially in senior
citizens. The patient-oriented strategies are best suited to deal with Sporadic
cases. Therefore, as a part of the Corona control measures, India should also
develop, simultaneously, a patient- oriented module that involves several
issues. Some are given below.
1.
The first
and foremost is where should the corona patient be admitted - in a general or
infectious disease hospital.
2.
Should
there be special hospitals established for Corona disease.
3.
Corona
infection causes death due to viral pneumonia especially in the senior citizens
in whom pneumonia is a common cause of death. Does it mean that all patients of
pneumonia should be first treated only in the infectious disease hospital till
the lab test (RT-PCR) is found negative.
4.
Social
distancing and other precautions should be followed while the patient is in the
hospital.
5.
There is
a need to develop a good standard treatment protocol
6.
Mandatory
lab investigations for the disease should be defined.
7.
Which
patient needs ventilator or every Covid 19 patient should be immediately put on
the ventilator. The criteria for taking them off the ventilators need to be
defined. This is very important, as there are mixed reports on their use18.
8.
Specific
instruction for disposal of dead patient should be defined.
9.
Should
there be separate medical and paramedical staff for these patients
10. The meaning of a positive RT-PCR test should to
be highlighted for the benefit of patient’s close contacts.
11. Although not directly connected with patient
care, the media hype has created unwittingly a monster called the Coronavirus
disease. Patients are so castigated that others shun hospitals that are
admitting them. There is a misconception that if you are just lab test positive
it is an end of the world for you. People are afraid of even touching a dead
corona patient. This needs to be immediately corrected, lest designated
colonies may be created for them, that needs to be avoided at all cost.
Given the challenge, India’s globally recognised
medical expertise could develop a suitable patient-oriented model. This is a golden opportunity for India to
create scientific history by creating an Indian patient-oriented clinical
model (made in India) that will be used by other nations where the disease
is either mild or sporadic.
References
1. WHO
Director-General's opening remarks at the media briefing on COVID-19 - 11 March
2020
https://www.who.int/dg/speeches/detail/who-director-general-s-opening-remarks-at-the-media-briefing-on-covid-19---11-march-2020 (accessed on April 14, 2020)
2. Coronavirus
Update (Live): 2994956 Cases and 206997 ...
3. Pandemic Preparation -An influenza pandemic http://www.who.int/csr/disease/influenza/pandemic/en/print.html
(accessed on April 30, 2020)
4. Coronavirus
disease 2019 (COVID-19) Situation Reports – 51
https://www.who.int/docs/default-source/coronaviruse/situation-reports/20200311-sitrep-51-covid-19.pdf?sfvrsn=1ba62e57_10 (accessed on April 30, 2020)
5. Doshis,
P
The elusive definition of pandemic influenza
WHO
Bulletin 2011; 89: 532-38
BMJ 2010;340:c2912
7.
Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)
Situation Report – 64
https://www.who.int/docs/default-source/coronaviruse/situation-reports/20200324-sitrep-64-covid-19.pdf?sfvrsn=723b221e_2
(accessed on April 30, 2020)
8. Slum Population in Mumbai and Delhi – PIB
9. Deo,
MG. Host factors in swine flu pandemic in India. Indian J Med Res. 2009; 130: 772-73
10. Fighting Health Hazards in Slums of Pune | Smile Foundation
11.
Human Influenza A
(H1N1) (Swine Flu)https://www.parliament.nz/en/pb/research-papers/document/00PLSoc09041/human-influenza-a-h1n1-swine-flu
(accessed on April 10,2020)
12. Seroprevalence
of the 2009 influenza A (H1N1) pandemic in New Zealand. https://www.health.govt.nz/system/files/documents/publications/seroprevalence-flu-2009.pdf
(accessed on April 10, 2020 )
13. Kaplan j, Frias L, McFall-Johnsen M A Third Of The Global Population Is On Coronavirus Lockdown:
https://www.businessinsider.in/international/news/a-third-of-the-global-population-is-on-coronavirus-lockdown-x2014-hereaposs-our-constantly-updated-list-of-countries-and-restrictions/slidelist/75208623.cms (accessed on April 30, 2020)
https://www.businessinsider.in/international/news/a-third-of-the-global-population-is-on-coronavirus-lockdown-x2014-hereaposs-our-constantly-updated-list-of-countries-and-restrictions/slidelist/75208623.cms (accessed on April 30, 2020)
14. Situation report – 94 Coronavirus disease 2019
https://www.who.int/docs/default-source/coronaviruse/situation-reports/20200427-sitrep-94-covid-19.pdf?sfvrsn=90323472_4(accessed
on April 30, 2020)
15. How many people are there in India? – Slum population
(accessed
on April 30, 2020)
16. Sweden says its no-lockdown strategy proving effective ...https://www.livemint.com/news/world/sweden-says-its-no-lockdown-strategy-proving-effective-against-coronavirus-11587365383534.html
(accessed on April 30, 2020)
17. Kaul
U and Bhatia V Perspective on coronary interventions
& cardiac surgeries in India Indian
J Med Res. 2010; 132: 543–48.
18.
Thompson
D: Ventilators: Helping or Harming COVID-19 Patients? https://www.webmd.com/lung/news/20200415/ventilators-helping-or-harming-covid-19-patients#1(accessed
on April 30, 2020)
Comments
Madhav Deo’s very lengthy ( and tedious) paper was too much to digest
and ingest. What he may be saying is “the virus is a moving target; but
the human brain can develop a dragnet to contain it". And “lockdowns
are not the way to go". And that’s the way other past pandemics have
been confronted, controlled and contained.
There may be another unintended but evolving strategy in India during these
bewildering times. Digital surveillance and subtle segregation of population
groups by the omnipotent State. Elders can be one. And their rights may be curtailed, constricted and restricted for the “good of the rest".
Orwellian ?! Huxley’s Brave New World?
Mouli