1. Home
  2. English
  3. “Third Wave May not Cause Much Concern if Covid-Appropriate Behaviour Maintained:” Arora
“Third Wave May not Cause Much Concern if Covid-Appropriate Behaviour Maintained:” Arora

“Third Wave May not Cause Much Concern if Covid-Appropriate Behaviour Maintained:” Arora

0
Social Share

Manas Dasgupta

NEW DELHI, June 26: After the Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR), another senior member of a government panel has raised a ray of hope that a possible third Covid wave may not make matter worse and likely to pass on without causing much concern.

“In the next wave people can develop a common cold-like illness but may not develop a serious or fatal illness,” Covid-19 Working Group of the National Technical Advisory Group on Immunisation chief Dr NK Arora said.

New variants are linked to fresh waves of the Covid-19 pandemic, but the Delta Plus variant, which has been found in 51 cases in the country so far, alone may not lead to a third wave, Dr Arora said.

The second wave of the Covid-19 pandemic in India is receding and Delta Plus, the new variant of Delta, has created fresh concerns as all epidemiologists have predicted a third wave of the pandemic as almost inevitable. “But Delta Plus can not be yet linked to a third wave of the pandemic,” Dr Arora said and yet asserted that as variants are linked to new waves, the possibility could not be dismissed altogether.

“Waves are linked to new variants or new mutations so there is a possibility as this is a new variant, but whether it will lead to a third wave it is difficult to answer as it will depend upon two or three things,” Dr Arora said.

The variant alone might not hit the country hard, Dr Arora said, as there were three other factors that would also control the new wave of the pandemic if it comes.

First, the third wave would depend on what proportion of the population got infected in the second wave. “If a large proportion was infected then in the next wave people can develop a common cold-like illness but may not develop a serious or fatal illness,” Dr Arora said.

Second, if the vaccination drive goes on with this speed, then a huge number of people would become immune by the time the third wave comes. “…the rapidity with which we vaccinate…even single dose is effective and the way we are planning, if we rapidly immunise then the possibility of a third wave becomes very less,” Dr Arora said.

Third, strict adherence to Covid-appropriate behaviour, including wearing of the masks, maintaining physical distance, will protect from any variant, a point that experts have been emphasising.

While Delta, the variant first reported in India, was found to be highly transmissible, the same can not be said about Delta Plus as the variant has been present in India for the last two months. The presence of the variant is localised and experts have said there is not enough evidence to corroborate that the variant is spreading fast or is more dangerous than Delta, or is immune-escape.

Delta, on the other hand, was one of the major factors behind the second wave of the pandemic in India, scientists have agreed and now it has spread across 174 districts of the country.

A team of scientists from the ICMR had also stated on Saturday that the likely third wave might not be as severe as the second and rapid scale-up of vaccination could further mitigate the present and future waves of the disease.

LEAVE YOUR COMMENT

Your email address will not be published.

Join our WhatsApp Channel

And stay informed with the latest news and updates.

Join Now
revoi whats app qr code