World

India scrambles to scale up care for COVID-19 patients amid fear of surge in northeast

With experts saying the coronavirus is likely spreading in India's northeastern state of Assam faster than anywhere else in the country, authorities were preparing Monday for a surge in infections by converting a massive stadium and a university into hospitals.

More than 22.6 million cases reported as country faces health-care crisis

People queue up to get vaccinated against the coronavirus in Gauhati, Assam, India on Monday. Health officials are worried about rising cases in the northeast of the country. (Anupam Nath/The Associated Press)

Health authorities in India's northeastern state of Assam were preparing Monday for a surge in infections by converting a massive stadium and a university into hospitals.
   
Countrywide, India's Health Ministry reported 360,000 new cases in the past 24 hours Monday, with more than 3,700 deaths. Since the pandemic began, India has seen more than 22.6 million infections and more than 246,000 deaths — both, experts say, almost certainly undercounts.

Cases in Assam started ticking upward a month ago and the official seven-day weekly average in the state on May 9 stood at more than 4,700 cases.
   
Add to that recent elections in the state — and the huge political rallies that accompanied them — and experts fear a uncontrolled surge is on the horizon.
   
Worryingly, along with cities in India's northeastern frontier — which is closer to Myanmar, Bangladesh and Bhutan than it is New Delhi — cases have also started to spike in some remote Himalayan villages in the region.

(CBC News)

Officials in Assam were racing to prepare for a virus surge because similar onslaughts in infections have overwhelmed hospitals in much richer Indian states.

"We are adding 1,000 beds a week to prepare ourselves in the event of cases spiralling," said Dr. Lakshmanan S, the director of the National Health Mission in Assam.

The state's largest government-run hospital, the Guwahati Medical College Hospital, has more than doubled its number of intensive care beds to 220 and health officials are building another 200 in the hospital's parking lot.

Stadium converted

A football and cricket stadium is being converted into a hospital for COVID-19 patients with 430 beds. The private Royal Global University in the state capital, Gauhati, has been converted into a hospital with 1,000 beds.

The state is sending doctors, paramedics and medicine to these facilities and the university said it would provide books and newspapers for patients to read.

"This is the least we thought we could do in this time of huge crisis for our country," said Dr. A.K. Pansari, the university chairman.

There are 2,100 beds reserved in government centres for COVID-19 patients in Gauhati, with hundreds more planned. That's in addition to the existing 750 beds for patients at private hospitals in the state.

Even as infections have increased, the rates of vaccination have fallen in Assam and the other states in the region since India expanded its coverage to include all adults on May 1.

A health worker administers the COVAXIN vaccine for COVID-19 to a journalist at the press club in Gauhati over the weekend. Infections have swelled in India in recent weeks, sparking a scramble to expand health-care services and step up vaccination efforts. (Anupam Nath/The Associated Press)

Adding to concerns is confirmation the virus has started spreading into more remote Himalayan villages with poor health infrastructure. These areas are home to Indigenous tribes, who already face some of the lowest access to health care in the country.

The region had largely been untouched by the virus earlier and many people behaved like COVID-19 didn't exist. But it now appears the virus was spreading in even remote villages without people knowing until it was too late.

The lack of awareness about the virus, lack or resources and the remoteness is complicating contact tracing in such areas, said Dr. Mite Linggi, the medical superintendent at the district hospital at Roing in Arunachal Pradesh state.

Despite the limited medical infrastructure and even more limited medical supplies, Linggi said what they really feared were power cuts.

"Power is crucial for running oxygen supply. We have patients gasping for air when the power comes and goes out," he said.