People wait in line to be tested for the CCP virus in Allahabad, India, Dec. 19, 2020.
India’s single day of Wuhan pneumonia on the 24th after the new cases broke 50,000, the 25th of a single day of new cases reached 59,074 cases, approaching 60,000 cases. Indian media said on the 26th, the second wave of the Epidemic cases increased faster than the first wave of the epidemic.
Hindustan Times (Hindustan Times) 26 analysis of official 2019 coronavirus disease (COVID-19, Wuhan pneumonia) statistics said that the week ending March 25, India’s average daily addition of 47,442 cases; the previous week, the average daily addition of cases only 28,551 cases. In just one week, the increase reached 66%, which is the maximum increase in the average daily increase of new cases in India since May 10 last year.
India in May last year, an average of about 3500 new cases of Wuhan pneumonia every day.
The report analyzed that if compared with the first wave of the Wuhan pneumonia epidemic in India reached its peak in August and September last year, the new cases of the second wave of the epidemic grew faster. If the current weekly increase in new cases continues, the peak of the second wave may soon exceed the peak of the first wave.
The State Bank of India (SBI) released a report on March 25 predicting that the second wave of the Wuhan pneumonia epidemic in India could reach its peak by the end of April and that the entire peak period could last 100 days.
SBI’s analysis of the first wave of Wuhan pneumonia in India indicates that the provinces of Maharashtra, Karnataka, Andhra Pradesh, Kerala, Chhattisgarh, West Bengal, Delhi and Tamil Nadu are among the most affected provinces. Delhi and Tamil Nadu performed poorly.
GC Khilnani, former head of the pulmonary department at All India Hospital (AIIMS) and now director of the pulmonary and critical care unit at PSRI Hospital, called on the government to restrict unnecessary large events, including large parties, weddings, trips to restaurants and bars that are not necessary. The Time has come to impose restrictions on these occasions and venues, which will have an economic impact, but will save lives.
Although several local governments in India have ordered a ban on Holi celebrations, many Indian people have already bought tickets and decided to celebrate Holi in less regulated rural areas, which is expected to have another impact on the epidemic.
In particular, the Punjab government statistics found that 81% of the new cases were infected with the British variant of the virus strain, which makes people worry whether the second wave of the epidemic in India is related to the more infectious British variant of the virus strain, which has become a hidden worry for India’s epidemic prevention.
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