NEW DELHI, June 24:
As India recorded the highest single-day jump of nearly 16,000 COVID-19 cases, Delhi surpassed Mumbai today while the lockdown in containment zones in West Bengal was extended till July 31 and a fresh ‘test, track and treat’ strategy put in place by the Centre to curb the spread of the infection.
Use of combination of various tests and making testing widely available to all symptomatic individuals across the country were at the heart of the government’s revised strategy to fight the pandemic that has claimed over 14,000 lives.
Delhi, which already is the second worst hit State in terms of Coronavirus caseload and fatalities, overtook Mumbai after the number of cases soared by 3,788 to touch 70,390. Mumbai has so far recorded 69,625 cases, according to official figures.
As part of the Delhi Government’s revised COVID-19 response plan, a house to house screening will be completed by June 30 in Containment Zones and for the rest of the city by July 6 in what is billed as a mammoth exercise.
As COVID-19 cases continued to spike in West Bengal, Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee announced extension of the lockdown in the Containment Zones till July 31. The lockdown in these zones was to end on June 30. With overall cases in the State inching towards 15,000, it is in the 7th position in the all India tally.
Andhra Pradesh and Karnataka surpassed the 10,000 mark while Telangana inched towards this grim milestone, according to official figures from the states.
In all, 12 States now account for more than 10,000 Coronavirus cases as they continued to report record daily spikes that were mainly attributed to augmented testing.
As daily testing of samples of blood and throat and nose swabs crossed two lakh for the first time since the outbreak of the pandemic, over 14,000 new coronavirus cases were registered in the country for the fifth day in a row to take the total count to 4,56,183, according to the Union Health Ministry data. The fatalities also rose by a record 465 and the death toll stood at 14,476.
At the same time the recovery rate was steadily improving to reach 56.71 per cent, the data showed.
The country has witnessed a surge of 2,65,648 infections from June 1 till June 24 with Maharashtra, Delhi, Tamil Nadu, Gujarat and Uttar Pradesh remaining the top five contributors to the rising tally. As many as 3,890 new COVID-19 cases were registered in Maharashtra today taking the count of patients to 1,42,900, a health department official said.
Andhra Pradesh accounted for 10,331 cases with 497 more people testing positive. While it took close to three months from March for the first 5,000 cases to emerge in AP, the second 5,000 came in just 15 days.
The tally in Karnataka was 10,118 with the state reporting 397 new positive cases.
The surge in COVID-19 cases continued unabated in Tamil Nadu with an all-time high of 2,865 people testing positive in a single day, taking the tally to 67,468 while the toll mounted to 866 with 33 deaths.
With the focus on increasing testing, the State analysed a record 32,079 samples on Wednesday. Inter-district public transport bus services were also being withdrawn in the state for six days from Thursday.
Kerala also reported the highest single day spike of 152 cases pushing the infection count to 3,603, officials said.
The Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR) said a total of 73,52,911 samples were tested up to June 23 with 2,15,195 samples being analysed on Tuesday and there were over 1,000 COVID-19 testing laboratories but acknowledged more needs to be done. (PTI)