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Experts say transmission of the COVID-19 virus through water is not a concern

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Dead body of COVID-19 patient float on the Ganga in Bihar | Image Courtesy: Twitter

Experts on Wednesday said transmission of coronavirus through water is not a concern after bodies of suspected COVID-19 patients were fished out of the Ganga and Yamuna.

Satish Tare, professor at IIT-Kanpur, said the dumping of dead bodies in the Ganga or its tributaries or sub-tributaries is a serious matter, particularly at a time when the country is grappling with the COVID-19 crisis.

The Ganga and Yamuna are key sources of drinking water for many villages, local bodies along the rivers.

The professor, however, stressed that dumping of bodies will not have a significant effect on coronavirus transmission.

Tare said dumping bodies in the Ganga or its tributaries is not new, but it has come down significantly in the last 10-15 years. Dumping of bodies primarily leads to pollution of rivers, he said.

Even if the bodies of suspected COVID-19 patients were fished out, there is a lot of dilution that happens (during the flow of water). The effect may not be significant, he said.

“If the water is passed for water supply, then it passes through the water supply system. Normal treatment takes care of it, said Tare, who teaches environmental engineering, water quality, and wastewater treatment.

He, however, added that there are patches where people draw water directly from the river. But even during this people do exercise caution.

Tare is also associated with the National Mission for Clean Ganga, the apex body under the Jal Shakti Ministry that deals with the cleaning of Ganga, its tributaries, and sub-tributaries.

On Tuesday, the Bihar government fished out 71 bodies from the Ganges in Buxar district, where these were found floating in the river, triggering suspicion that the abandoned corpses could be those of COVID-19 patients.

According to Ballia residents in Uttar Pradesh, at least 45 bodies were seen floating at the Ujiyar, Kulhadia, and Bharauli ghats in the Narahi area. However, the district authorities did not tell the exact number of bodies found there.

On Monday, residents in the Hamirpur district spotted five bodies floating in the Yamuna, creating a scare that these were of COVID patients. The bodies were later fished out and cremated.

Vaccine paucity: Maharashtra suspends vaccination drive for 18-44 age group; priority to 45-plus age group

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Image Courtesy: PTI

Due to the acute shortage of COVID-19 vaccines in Maharashtra, the state government on Wednesday decided to temporarily suspend its drive to vaccinate people in the age group of 18 to 44 and divert the available stock of doses for the above-45 age group, Health Minister Rajesh Tope said.

This decision was taken during the state cabinet meeting.

The minister also revealed that the Serum Institute of India (SII) has informed the Maharashtra government that it would be able to provide 1.5 crore Covishield vaccines to the state only from May 20 onwards.

“There is no sufficient supply of vaccine vials by the Centre for inoculation of above-45 age group people. Hence, the state cabinet decided to divert the stock, purchased for the 18-44 age group, for the above-45 age group. Therefore, we are suspending the inoculation of the 18-44 age group for some period,” Tope said.

While Covishield vaccine is manufactured by Pune-based SII, Covaxin is produced by Bharat Biotech.

“Adar Poonawalla of SII has informed Chief Minister Uddhav Thackeray of his ability to supply around 1.5 crore vials of Covishield from May 20 onwards. Once we receive the supply, we will resume the vaccination of 18-44 age group,” the minister said.

On Tuesday, Tope had alleged that the Union government was not fulfilling its responsibility to provide adequate number of vaccine doses to states.

Black Fungus has taken the vision of many COVID patients

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Representative Image

Recently a Nalasopara resident, Sanjay Pandey, has lost his vision in the left eye to the fungal infection, mucormycosis also called black fungus, that has been targeting an increasing number of COVID-19 patients. Although Pandey spent around Rs 18 lakh on treatment, delayed diagnoses and treatment led to vision loss. They are now struggling to procure the costly medicines, without which he may suffer a brain haemorrhage.

Pandey’s troubles began 20 days ago with a headache, fever and redness in the eye. He was rushed to a nearby hospital where he was diagnosed with typhoid and treated for five days. After being discharged, his symptoms persisted, so his family took him to another hospital where he tested positive for COVID-19.

Pandey was then treated for nine days at Vinayaka Hospital in Nalasopara. The swelling near his eye increased and his eyelid started closing. We kept asking the doctors about it but did not get a suitable reply. The family was told that it is because of COVID-19. Later, he lost vision in the left eye. While in most cases mucormycosis has been developing during or after COVID-19 treatment, in Pandey’s case, both diseases came together.

Besides, symptoms depend on where the fungus was growing in the body. If the growth is on the sinus and brain region, symptoms can include one-sided facial swelling, headache, nasal or sinus congestion, fever, and black lesions on the nasal bridge or upper inside of the mouth that can quickly become more severe. It may also lead to eye pain and ultimately result in loss of vision if not treated immediately. If in the lung, symptoms may include fever, cough, chest pain and shortness of breath.

The distress and chaos related to COVID don’t seem to end with many new symptoms related to the virus making headlines on a day-to-day basis. Well, right now the most searched COVID-related symptom is the “black fungus”. Mucormycosis has been reported in many COVID-19 survivors, mainly from Delhi, Maharashtra and Gujarat.

The number of such cases has increased as Gujarat sees an exponential rise in coronavirus infections. At least eight persons were reported to have lost their eyesight in Surat due to mucormycosis (MM) after recovering from COVID-19. They had to be admitted to hospitals for the sudden loss of vision. In the past 15 days, Surat has reported at least 40 cases of mucormycosis or black fungus including eight who have lost their eyesight. Similarly, Maharashtra has 2000 and above cases.

The infection, triggered by COVID-19, is treatable but if left untreated or if the treatment is delayed, the condition can lead to the loss of vision, and in some cases increase mortality. Sadly, there is a shortage of injections to treat black fungus.

The black fungus affects the sinuses or the lungs after inhaling fungal spores from the air. It can also occur on the skin after a cut, burn, or another type of skin injury. It is seen in the form of blackish moulds. People get mucormycosis by coming in contact with the fungal spores in the environment. The fungus causes the disease that has now been linked to the airborne COVID-19 infection.

The infection first came to light during the first ‘wave’ of the pandemic. It was previously known as zygomycosis. The cases of Mucormycosis, affecting some COVID-19 survivors are on the rise in Maharashtra and Gujarat which has left many patient’s blinds.

Meanwhile, considering the growing number of patients with mucormycosis, Surat’s civil hospital has set up a separate facility for their treatment. Whereas the Maharashtra government is using medical colleges as centres of treatment. As per the news reports, as the infection is not categorised as a communicable disease, the state health department does not maintain a public record of the same, unless individually notified by hospitals.

Mucormycosis: 2,000 cases of Black Fungus in Maharashtra

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Experts say ‘black fungus’ is commonly seen in patients who have recovered from Covid-19 but have comorbidities such as diabetes, kidney or heart failure or cancer. | Image Courtesy: PTI

As Maharashtra spindles under the second wave of COVID-19, cases of black fungus infection mucormycosis are rising in recovered patients. Cases commonly known as black fungus, have been reported from Maharashtra among those who have recovered from COVID-19.

The fungal infection is caused by a group of moulds called Mucormycetes. These moulds live throughout the environment. Mucormycosis mainly affects people who have health problems or take medicines that lower the body’s ability to fight germs and sickness.

Health Minister Rajesh Tope told Afternoon Voice, “The growing cases of black fungal infection is a matter of concern, the state government has planned to use hospitals attached to medical colleges as treatment centres for Mucormycosis, a serious but rare fungal infection now affecting coronavirus patients.”

He said, “There could be over 2,000 new Mucormycosis patients in the state as of now and with more and more COVID-19 cases coming up, their number would increase for sure.”

He said black fungus has a 50 per cent mortality rate and is found in COVID-19 patients with suppressed immunity or co-morbidities.

“We are trying to cover most of the treatment under the Mahatma Phule Jan Aarogya Yojana (the state’s flagship health scheme), as Mucormycosis patient needs to be seen by various experts such as ENT, ophthalmologists and neurologists among others,” the minister stated further.

Commenting over the costly treatment, Tope said, “I will be writing to the National Pharmaceutical Pricing Authority to bring down the MRP of medicines needed for Mucormycosis treatment. Amphotericin-B is a key medicine required for the treatment of such patients. Haffkine (a state-run pharma firm based in Mumbai) is going float a tender for one lakh injections of the drug.”

Symptoms of Mucormycosis, also known as black fungus, include headache, fever, pain under the eyes, nasal or sinus congestion and partial loss of vision.

Odisha has detected its first case of mucormycosis or ‘black fungus’ in a 71-year-old COVID-19 patient with a known history of chronic diabetes. On Friday Niti Aayog Member (Health) V K Paul had said that mucormycosis cases were being found in coronavirus patients. Maharashtra, Gujarat has reported a rise in cases of rare but potentially fatal infection.

The Modi government has failed but the system still struggling to do its bit

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Prime Minister Narendra Modi | Image Courtesy: AP

Since Prime Minister Narendra Modi came to power whatever he announced has flopped after big hype, Swachh Bharat Abhiyan remained a publicity stunt, nothing else. The garbage piles across cities making fun of the system. Demonetisation was a big shocker for the middle class and small-time business people, no black money returned to India but rupees two thousand notes gave birth to new corruption in India.

People voted for this government so that Vijay Mallya type crooks should be behind the bar and not making a mockery of India at the International level. Many businessmen duped Indian banks and hid in foreign lands and our government has no reach to nab them.

What has been done under this government to improve the education system or health care system? Ask the budding entrepreneurs that how the Make in India initiative is helping them, the groundwork for any of these initiatives is zero. There was one such yojana from our PM in which Rs 6000 will be given as cash or in their accounts to the pregnant ladies. How on Earth is this a progressive move?

BJP consists of shrewd politicians. Be it Amit shah, Modi himself. They are creating such a scenario that they want no voices against them to be annulled. They just conquered it fooling people with a feeling that they are the party full of nationalism. The appointment of Ram Nath Kovind purely on caste is sheer hypocrisy on behalf of a party who voiced not to support casteism in India.

LPG raised prices, Opposing GST and now implementing it are some more examples. What I see is only words, no actions. No education for poor, no health reforms, no cleanliness but Back to the ideology of old days “Gai hamari mata hain humko aur kuch nahi bhata hain”.

The recent statement by Congress President Sonia Gandhi. She emphasizes her view by looking at the second wave of Corona and the government’s inability to control the pandemic. “The system has not failed, but the Modi government has failed.”

Health workers, policemen, and mortgagors are the same as before. Listen to various commentators – 4 lakh cases daily and 4 thousand deaths. India has set a world record in rapid vaccination despite the acute shortage of vaccines. But again, the elites have no struggle in availing their vaccines but commoners have to struggle to get an appointment and then vaccine in time.

The Allahabad High Court called the unprecedented epidemic deaths at a Corona hearing even as a massacre, and NDTV anchor Ravish Kumar has also appealed to fans to call it a massacre. These are the hallmarks of judicial joblessness and media dismissal respectively. Neither the High Court is going to sentence anyone to ‘genocide’ nor Ravish Kumar will be able to tighten the standard of ‘genocide’ to anyone. We are just wasting our time in a war of words.

Therefore, Sonia’s political perspective is more grounded. It can be easily tested, in the interval between the overthrow of the Sonia regime in India and the check of the Modi regime in the meantime, the health system of the country has not changed even an inch. Well, Congress has always believed in infrastructure and development in the true sense because all the hospitals, medical centres were built in their regime, the Modi government gave us statues and temples but no schools or hospitals. The Smart City project is another big failure.

God forbid, if tomorrow a distinguished member of one camp dies with corona, then the other side will leave no stone unturned to pay tribute to the person. If in doubt, the long-overdue tribute of Ravish Kumar should be read on the untimely death of Rohit Sardana, the Taliban of the mooring media. This became an example of the success of the system. The media is divided, there are different groups, some support only the government no matter how much they failed and some attack Modi no matter whatever he does, this is one big achievement of the system in present days.

Of course, anyone can come wherever in the grip of Corona, but who will die, the governance system is deciding it beforehand. The rich and wealthy are in the care of the corporate hospitals, the middle class in the Jugaad of ‘good’ medical facilities and the poor in their absence! Governments in cities keep giving solace and the news of rare accountability in the media keeps ongoing.

Making government hospitals well maintained, food supply and giving other facilities is a government responsibility and this has been part of the system for decades. Now, in times of pandemics, how can it be called ‘failed’? Of course, Prime Minister Narendra Modi has been replicated in the international media for India’s national shame over Corona management, Sonia’s claim about the recovery of the system is nothing more than this.

Think, in the name of the hospital, due to administrative commissioning mechanisms, the expenditure on building and equipment has always been there, but, as there are unwritten rules, oxygen plants are not made even for emergency wards. Why? Because, from the beginning, like any other supply, oxygen supply has also been a part of the wider commissioning mechanism. Even if we had to build our oxygen plants for hospitals in the current clamour of the Corona era, they would surely remain victims of expensive maintenance.

There is black marketing of every necessary corona related facilities, be it arranging beds or oxygen supply. And legal proceedings are not limited to statistics on middlemen, hoarders and profiteers? Are there not all types of specialists and all kinds of hospitals in the country? Has anyone ever forgotten that the needy should be given priority? This is the well-known system that Sonia has talked about and in which even a little scratch has not been found.

If you have to mark a corona hero today, then whose name will be on your mind? Not only Bollywood stars Sonu Sood. In the media, he is being called a ‘messiah’ on his face and he can often be seen accepting it with a slight grin.

Wait, how does everyone know that a close friend of cricketer Suresh Raina, Sonu Sood can work in an oxygen emergency! Whatever they do, it immediately becomes popular. Also, the requests for help that have come to them will be dealt with by 2035. Isn’t this the system? Will it be called a system failure?

Are not the jail manuals doing their work that the death of Mahavir Narwal, who was dying for months, met his daughter, Natasha, who has been in jail. Actor-YouTuber Rahul Vohra said while dying in the hospital, “If I had got good treatment, I might have survived too.” But this is the system! I agree with the Congress President.


COVID-19: Maharashtra’s extraordinary dealings saved 19,000 lives in the second wave

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COVID-19: Maharashtra’s extraordinary dealings saved 19,000 lives in the second wave 7

The COVID-19 cases in Maharashtra dropped drastically, the state has recorded its lowest single day Covid tally at 37,236 on Monday for the first time in 41 days, the state’s handling of the pandemic received from the country’s premier scientific institutes, the Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore.

Mumbai saw 1,782 new cases, taking the tally to 6,77,412 while the overall fatality count stood at 13,855, the department said. The Pune circle, which covers Solapur and Satara districts besides Pune, reported the highest 8,120 cases in the day in the state, followed by 7,151 new infections in the Nashik circle.

The number of daily coronavirus positive cases in the state, which has been whirling under the rising pandemic, threw down underneath 40,000 to 37,236 on Monday for the first time after March 31. Maharashtra’s overall cases now stand at 51,38,973 while 549 mortalities pushed the toll 76,398, the state health department said.

Maharashtra’s extraordinary dealings saved around 19,000 lives in the second wave and it escaped the additional burden of 38 lakh cases too, Dr Sashikumaar Ganesan who handles the institute’s Covid dashboard told a leading daily.

Maharashtra government in April has imposed excessive orders banning dining-in at restaurants, closed temples and malls when the second wave hit the country hard. The state was reporting over 50,000 cases on most days since April 9.

The report added that the capital Mumbai reported 11,206 cases on April 4, three times the highest single-day tally during the first wave of the pandemic. However, registering a sharp fall, the financial capital reported just 1,782 cases, the lowest in 76 days. Deaths in both Maharashtra and Mumbai continued to be high at 549 and 74, respectively. Maharashtra had earlier reported 39,544 cases on March 31. Maharashtra is now left with 5,90,818 active cases.

Due to the 15-day lockdown in the state, it not only saved 19,000 lives but also averted more than 38 lakh cases, according to the IISC model. The national trend curve had earlier predicted 95,300 deaths in Maharashtra on May 9, the actual toll stood at 75,850. While it estimated the caseload to climb to 89 lakhs by May 9, the actual caseload went 51 lakhs.

Work-for-Home to Work-from-Home stressed women in Lockdown

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Image Courtesy: PTI

Lockdown has affected the woman, by all means, managing family without house help, taking care of the job and above all managing financial and children’s study stress is something the woman of the house had to take on her. Women seem to be more strained than men during the Pandemic.

There is a need to introspect the inflexibility around gender responsibilities in the traditional meaning of the term. Women belonging to families, where these responsibilities are not as rigid as they used to be, are not as stressed during this period of lockdown. The coronavirus lockdown in India has, ironically, doubled the burden: work-from-home and work-for-home. The coronavirus pandemic and the unique lockdown that followed have led to the rise in stress levels among people worldwide.

Various studies have warned of an impending risk of a major global mental health crisis due to the coronavirus outbreak. Young women seem to be at particular risk of developing mental health problems as a result of the pandemic. The survey conducted by the NGO Population Foundation of India looked at the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on people between 10 and 24 years in UP, Bihar, and Rajasthan in May.

Nine out of 10 respondents revealed that they had to seek some kind of counselling to cope with the mental health fallout of the unprecedented lockdown. The higher stress level in young women was linked to a variety of reasons, including extra workload at home, family pressure, withdrawal of education, and lack of access to their basic needs. Disruptions in the daily routine triggering spike in eating disorder cases.

Unfortunately, many women had no idea what was in store for them. In the absence of the support staff consisting of a cook and two maids, the major share of household chores rested on their shoulder. Her day starts early, almost at 6 am because she needed to cook breakfast and clean the house before she started her office work at 9 am. Around noon she would leave her office work unattended to cook lunch and since she didn’t have the time to eat her meals peacefully, she would eat whatever she could between online meetings and presentations. Unable to handle the pressure after four long months, many broke down and sought help from a counselling psychologist. Over the past many days, women have been fighting in vain to secure entry for their domestic help into their residential society.

Above all, this is work-from-home, not a holiday. Without the maid, it’s impossible to cook, clean and take care of the kid. As the “woman of the house,” the responsibility of running the household, which includes husband, children and other members. All that exclusively falls on the woman of the house.

In the absence of the domestic help who otherwise handled most of these chores—cleaning, mopping, washing dishes, babysitting—carries the additional physical and mental burden now. For that is the rule instinctively adhered to in Indian families where male members are not expected to perform household tasks. There is a very clear gender dimension to it (the lockdown) because most Indian households don’t have equal sharing of housework. Even though the husband and wife may be both working from home, the load will be disproportionately borne by the women. And this doesn’t mean full-time homemakers are better off. They will have the added issue of catering to the demands of their husbands, fathers-in-law, or brothers-in-law, who are at home now.

There are many single women in the city and they have their different challenges, one in three women are currently suffering from loneliness owing to pandemic and lockdown. Social distancing and isolation have created a void in these women’s mind and that has led to loneliness, a complex human emotion that can gradually lead to depression and then suicide, if not addressed on time.

Recently, researchers at the University of Essex conducted a study and found out that women are more vulnerable to mental health problems during the coronavirus pandemic than men. The study revealed that the number of women suffering from stress and loneliness during the COVID-19 outbreak has risen from 11 per cent to 27 per cent. On the other hand, the number of men suffering from at least one mental condition has reached 18 per cent from 7 per cent. Notably, loneliness is described as a state of solitude and feeling alone. It can leave you feeling unwanted and empty. People suffering from loneliness crave human attention and communication but feel difficult to form connections.

There are an array of reasons why you may feel lonely. Four-five long months, all alone in four walls, with multiple issues to handle, in such a situation’s loneliness leads to alcoholism, antisocial behaviour, decreased memory, altered brain function, and hopelessness. Anxiety, insomnia, loss of appetite, and lack of physical activity are some of the biggest challenges that Sheila and her husband face and the couple admits that they have become apprehensive, resentful, anxious and prone to anger. Now commuting to the office in Bus is another challenge, local trains yet to resume. Limited buses running on limited frequencies, imagine how much stress this is. Long hours going in a queue, then getting a seat, then travelling distance. Woman traveller spends her maximum time commuting. Her day starts very early and hardly any night time in her kitty. We as society and authorities, need to felicitate women with some facilities, where the like can become a little easy for her.


Government should publish details of disbursement, say Mumbai’s autorickshaw drivers

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Image Courtesy: Reuters

An official informed the media that the sum of Rs 108 crore has been allocated to provide Rs 1,500 each as one-time relief amid coronavirus-induced restrictions to 7.20 lakh autorickshaw drivers in Maharashtra. The government notification on this was issued on May 7.

The money will be deposited directly in the accounts of drivers who will have to upload permit, badge, vehicle and Aadhaar card details to be eligible for the relief package, the official informed.

Krishna Yadav
Krishna Yadav

Krishna Yadav, an auto driver from Mumbai’s Kandivali area said, “Government always announces such schemes but they remain in their books. For one and half years due to this lockdown auto drivers suffered a lack of job, ask the government to provide the data of all those rickshaw pullers who have received aids.”

In the wake of lockdown following the COVID-19 outbreak, autorickshaw drivers in Maharashtra have not only been hit financially but also psychologically. Though they know the step has been initiated due to a medical emergency, it is hard to make ends meet, they say.

Gopal Yadav
Gopal Yadav

Gopal Yadav, an autorickshaw driver from Kalina Mumbai said, “I have not used my autorickshaw since the day the second lockdown was announced. On a normal day, the day’s earnings would be used for buying important commodities. But now I can only buy them in small amounts. I have two kids and old parents, but don’t have any support from anywhere to take care of family needs, even if I receive this 1500 relief, how can that take care of me?”

Purab Mishra
Purab Mishra

Purab Mishra, who receives customers throughout the day normally, says that “It is difficult for him to sit idle at home. “I spend time watching the television or doing some household work,” he says, adding he is already under stress due to his present financial condition. My wife is a maid but she is also out of work.

Sunder Prajapati
Sunder Prajapati


“I have a loan to refund. But now I have to borrow more money to feed my family,” says Sunder Prajapati from Borivali station. “I need to work hard after the lockdown is lifted completely, then only I will be able to earn enough to pay back the loan,” Prajapati says.

So far, no autorickshaw drivers have received any aid or financial help from the state government, the news is hitting headlines but the ground reality is completely different.

Sonia Gandhi hits out at government says, “Centre has abdicated its responsibility & left vaccination to states”

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On Monday, Congress interim President Sonia Gandhi alleged that the Centre has abdicated its responsibility and left COVID-19 vaccination to states.

“Modi government has abdicated its responsibility and left vaccination to states. It would have been financially more equitable for the Centre to provide free vaccine to all,” the party Chief said while Congress Working Committee (CWC) meeting.

Sonia Gandhi further expressed concern over the worrying situation due to the COVID-19 pandemic in the country.

“In past four weeks, COVID-19 situation has become even more catastrophic. Governance failures have become even starker. Scientific advice has been willfully ignored and the country is paying a horrendous price for the Central government’s neglect of the pandemic,” she added.

Meanwhile, India today reported 3,66,161 new coronavirus cases in the last 24 hours, as per the union health ministry. With this, the cumulative count of the cases has gone up to 2,26,62,575.

As many as 3,754 people succumbed to the disease in the country in the last 24 hours, taking the cumulative death toll to 2,46,116. As per the government data, a present there are 37,45,237 active cases of COVID-19 in the country.

The country also witnessed as many as 3,53,818 recoveries taking the cumulative recoveries to 1,86,71,222. The total doses of the COVID-19 vaccine administered stand at over 17,01,76,603, informed the health ministry.

COVID-19: Mucormycosis, black Fungus a new health hazard

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COVID-19: Mucormycosis, black Fungus a new health hazard 16

In Mumbai many COVID-19 survivors have died due to mucormycosis, a fungal infection, during treatment in the state, so far 200 such patients are being treated out of which eight patients lost their lives. India has been reporting over 4 lakh COVID-19 infections daily for the past three days and the death toll has remained over 3000 for the past ten days.


Even as medical authorities wrestling with new emergent variants showing different symptoms in India, hospitals are perceiving a rise in deadly fungal infection in patients recovering from COVID. Hospitals in cities like Delhi, Pune and Ahmedabad have reported multiple cases of Mucormycosis, also known as black fungus which is visible in patients post COVID-19 recovery.


It is a rare problem developing in COVID patients, sometimes, during active COVID infection, but more commonly – weeks to months after recovery from COVID. It is a rare but hazardous fungal infection caused by a group of moulds known as mucormycetes, which are present naturally in the atmosphere.


It instigates in the sinuses/nose/teeth and has the potential to spread into the eye and even the brain. If not detected in time, this infection can be dangerous and life-threatening. Currently, there are no proven feasible measures for prevention and early detection is the best bet for now. Some of the things supported for preclusion are gargles and nasal douching with Betadine solution, strict control of diabetes, using steroids only on prescription by a physician.
Mucormycosis only causes serious complications when a patient has pre-existing health problems or has taken medication that conciliates the immunity system. People who have received steroids as a part of their Covid-19 treatment are at risk. Persons who have received immunomodulatory drugs e.g. Tocilizumab also faces risk.


Doctors say nothing is as risky as high and uncontrolled diabetes. Previously immunocompromised patients on cancer treatment or with autoimmune conditions are also vulnerable. Patients on steroids for other medical conditions can also be vulnerable. When the same COVID-19 patient is put on oxygen support, which has a humidifier containing water, the chances of him or her getting the fungal infection increase.


Fungal disease is already acknowledged but the cases are increasing because of COVID-19 related problems, wherein the use of steroids raises the sugar level in blood while some medicines result in suppression of immunity of patients. In such a scenario, the black fungus infects the patient easily and spreads.


If the fungus reaches the brain of the infected person, it can prove fatal. In one such case, one of the eyes of a patient had to be removed permanently to save his life. The hospital, which is managed by a trust, has been receiving several patients diagnosed with Mucormycosis who are being referred from various areas in Surat and other parts of Gujarat.


In Ahmedabad, at least five patients with mucormycosis are being operated upon every day at the civil hospital at Asarva. In Ahmedabad, doctors are receiving 5 to 10 such cases at the civil hospital, especially since the second wave of COVID-19 started. These patients are being examined on priority and operated on as early as possible.


Black Fungus generally affects COVID-19 recovered patients who have other comorbidities like diabetes, kidney or heart failure, cancer as well as patients who are on steroids or have had a transplant. However, it is most common in diabetic patients, said the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) of the United States.


Prior to the COVID era, Black Fungus was extremely rare and found only in immunocompromised people. However, coronavirus itself reduces immunity levels, largely affects diabetic people and is treated with steroids if serious. As a result, COVID survivors are vulnerable to the infection, especially in the severe second wave.


Early detection will aid the patient’s medication for the fungal infection and clinical intervention to the affected area. Usually, MRI scans determine the extent of damage the fungus may have caused. Mucormycosis, if left undiagnosed or untreated, may result in blindness, removal of the nose, jaw-bone or even death. So, all those COVID 19 patients having symptoms like one-sided facial swelling, headache, nasal or sinus congestion, black lesions on nasal bridge or upper inside of the mouth, fever, partial loss of eyesight, Pain under the eyes should get diagnosed without any delay and secure their lives.