Home India Omicron in India Could Require 60,000 People Hospitalised Per Day

Omicron in India Could Require 60,000 People Hospitalised Per Day

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Desk,03-Jan; India is going through an Omicron wave – one we don’t seem to be acknowledging. While official figures suggest that Omicron cases are less than 2 per cent of India’s total Covid cases, this could be a massive underestimate and warns that a major Omicron health crisis could hit India very soon and that Omicron is now the dominant variant in India.While the official number of Omicron cases in India is estimated to be nearly 1, 500, in reality, it could be more than 10 times that – as high as 18,000 – with the number shooting up every day.India is following the rest of the world in galloping Omicron cases, which in some countries, account for 90 per cent of new cases.India’s official numbers are so low because it has very few testing facilities or labs that can check for genome sequencing which is essential to detecting Omicron. Data has been collected from two labs that are able to test for Omicron – and the numbers tell a very different story from what official figures suggest.Two major labs, one each in Delhi and in Mumbai, testing for Omicron, show that of all Covid cases, Omicron is now as high as nearly 60 per cent. Another Omicron lab in Mumbai is also likely to show in its next report that Omicron is 60 per cent, up from 37 per cent just a week ago.Particularly alarming is the fact that Omicron cases are rising much faster than Delta – from about 2 per cent share of total Covid cases two to three weeks ago, then shooting up to 30 per cent a few days ago- and is now close to 60 per cent of all Covid cases. During this period, the share of the Delta variant has fallen consistently, making Omicron the dominant variant in India.This is both good news and bad news for India. The good news is that Omicron causes less severe infections than Delta. A higher percentage of Delta patients are hospitalised with a higher percentage of deaths, too, compared with Omicron.But the worrying news for India is that Omicron spreads much faster – it is estimated to be four to five times more infectious than the Delta variant.This suggests that if this third wave accelerates in India like it has across the rest of the world, India could see between 16 lakhs to 20 lakh cases every day at its peak compared with the compared with the 4 lakh Delta cases that India had at the peak of our second wave.This would place an unmanageable strain on our medical system – hospital beds, oxygen cylinders, doctors, and the availability of medicines. This is because even though a fewer percentage of Omicron cases are likely to be hospitalized, the overall number of cases and infections are so much larger.

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