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Kerala's Response to COVID-19 Pandemic

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April 23, 2020

What is the issue?

  • Kerala has consistently stayed ahead of the coronavirus curve, with its 70% recovery rate being the highest in the country.
  • It is imperative, in this context, to understand the strategies employed and the features of Kerala's healthcare system.

How has public health in Kerala been?

  • Much before Kerala became a separate state in 1956, the region had seen several path-breaking public health interventions.
  • In 1879, the erstwhile Travancore rulers made a proclamation making vaccination compulsory for public servants, prisoners and students.
  • In 1928, a parasite survey, done in association with the Rockefeller Foundation, led to the control of hookworm and filariasis.
  • This community health legacy was further supported by the state’s focus on literacy and women’s education.
  • This helped attain near 100% vaccination levels and develop a culture of personal hygiene.
  • The WHO, in a survey held in 12 countries in 2005, found that hand-washing with soap after defecation had a prevalence of 34% in Kerala.
  • This was the highest among the states/countries surveyed.
  • So, the ‘Break the Chain’ campaign for COVID-19, to promote hand-washing and sanitizers' use, only reiterated some of the already existing best practices.

How supportive is the health infrastructure?

  • A critical factor in Kerala’s COVID-19 battle has been its robust healthcare system.
  • It is considered on a par with those of many developed countries.
  • In June 2019, Kerala topped all states on the NITI Aayog’s annual health index with an overall score of 74.01.
  • This is more than 2½ times that of the least-performing state, UP (28.61).
  • Kerala has only been investing 5% of its total state plan outlay on healthcare (roughly the national average spending in the sector).
  • But its focus on healthcare at the level of Primary Health Centres and Community Health Centres is noteworthy.
  • The management of these centres are in the hands of three-tier local bodies.
  • With efficient management, many of these have modern diagnostic facilities and offer tele-medicine services.
  • The state’s private health sector, once dominated by the Church, has grown rapidly in the last two decades.
  • This was mainly with support from investment from NRIs and corporate healthcare groups.

How was Kerala's response to the COVID-19 pandemic?

  • On January 30, 2020 India - and Kerala - reported its first COVID-19 case, a 23-year-old medical student who had returned from Wuhan, China.
  • But by January 30, as many as 800 persons with China travel history had already been kept under observation in Kerala.
  • On February 1, 2020, the state’s coronavirus control cells laid out guidelines on testing, quarantine, hospital admission and discharge criteria. This is a living document that is regularly updated.
  • Until late January, the state did not have any testing facility.
  • The throat swabs of suspected cases had to be sent to the National Institute of Virology (NIV), Pune.
  • But by the first week of February, NIV-Alappuzha got sanction to conduct the tests.
  • In two months from then, Kerala’s COVID-19 testing facilities have grown to 13, ten of those in the government sector.
  • As on 22 April, 2020, Kerala has tested close to 20,800 samples, whish is the highest for any state.
  • The state also stepped up its medical facilities, turning defunct hospitals into COVID-19 facilities.

How did the earlier Nipah outbreak experience help?

  • While broadly sticking to the Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR) protocol, Kerala put in place its rigorous surveillance network.
  • The surveillance network was one that had been fine-tuned to perfection during the outbreak of the Nipah virus in 2018 and 2019.
  • Besides tracing contacts, Kerala strictly enforced 28 days of home quarantine (the general incubation period of the virus is 14 days).
  • From early March 2020, the state screened all international passengers.
  • Even if someone managed to skip airport screening, they would have to deal with village committees.
  • These committees kept the health department informed about fresh arrivals and ensured they remained indoors.
  • In hotspots districts, some village panchayats even launched call centres, connecting those quarantined with the authorities.
  • Besides, route maps of positive cases, drawn through GPS data, were released to help people self-report.
  • Geo-mapping of those under observation enabled better cluster management.
  • Once flight operations were suspended, the state focused on inter-state road and rail travellers.
  • Those who reached Kerala from other states in this period and their contacts were asked to isolate themselves.
  • It was this strategy that helped the state rein in infections from participants of the Tablighi Jamaat event in Delhi.
  • Several other states started acting only when positive cases from among the Tablighis were reported.
  • But Kerala had already placed around 217 such persons under observation. Eventually, 20 of them tested positive.

How has the social, political outfits helped?

  • Despite the largely bipolar nature of Kerala’s politics, there was unison between the parties to fight the pandemic.
  • Every evening, Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan chairs a review meeting and address daily press briefings on the state’s tackling of the situation.
  • The Health Minister Shailaja holds daily meetings with district medical officers.
  • The Chief Minister’s Office coordinates with other departments such as police, revenue, electricity, etc.
  • The Kudumbashree Mission, the state’s poverty eradication and women empowerment programme, has also been at the frontlines.
  • It has been supporting the efforts in various ways, with volunteers pitching in to make masks and launching community kitchens, etc.

 

Source: Indian Express

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