Last September, India was confirming nearly 100,000 new coronavirus cases a day. It was on track to overtake the United States to become the country with the highest reported COVID-19 caseload in the world. Hospitals were full. The Indian economy nosedived into an unprecedented recession.
But four months later, India's coronavirus numbers have plummeted. Late last month, on Jan. 26, the country's Health Ministry confirmed a record low of about 9,100 new daily cases — in a country of nearly 1.4 billion people. It was India's lowest daily tally in eight months. On Monday, India confirmed about 11,000 cases.
"It's not that India is testing less or things are going underreported," says Jishnu Das, a health economist at Georgetown University. "It's been rising, rising — and now suddenly, it's vanished! I mean, hospital ICU utilization has gone down. Every indicator says the numbers are down."
Scientists say it's a mystery. They're probing why India's coronavirus numbers have declined so dramatically — and so suddenly, in September and October, months before any vaccinations began.
They're trying to figure out what Indians may be doing right and how to mimic that in other countries that are still suffering.
I've noticed what I think is a similar trend in cases in the US in recent weeks. I doubt that that is a result of simply following the guidelines. I've wondered if we have some degree of immunity that's been reached through undiagnosed, asymptomatic cases in the population. I have a particular case in mind as I wonder this. My daughter who lives with us donates platelets very frequently at our local blood bank. After her last donation, she was found to have positive antibodies for COVID-19. She has no known infection, but inadvertent exposure is always a possibility. Perhaps there is a greater percentage of the population in India (and in the USA) than has been accounted for in current models.
That doesn't impede my regular searches for a location in my area where I can receive a vaccination. I don't believe that I share any immunity at this point in time.
Big Al
-------------------------------- Money seems to buy the most happiness when you give it away.
Why does everything have to be so complicated, all in the name of convenience. -ShiroKuro
A lifetime of experience will change a person. If it doesn't, then you're already dead inside. -MarkJ
Posts: 7466 | Location: Western PA | Registered: 20 April 2005