Punjab reports 4 more corona deaths, 162 new cases
- June 24, 2020
- Updated: 06:37 pm
DW BUREAU / chandigarh
The death toll due to COVID-19 in Punjab on Tuesday rose to 105 with four fresh fatalities, while the state's tally of cases climbed to 4,397 as 162 more people tested positive for the disease, a health department bulletin said. Two fatalities were reported from Ludhiana and one each from Amritsar and Patiala, it said.
Jalandhar reported the maximum number of fresh cases at 38, followed by 34 in Ludhiana; 18 in Sangrur; 12 in Patiala; 11 in Bathinda; 10 in Fatehgarh Sahib; nine in Moga; seven in Amritsar; four each in Ferozepur, Gurdaspur and Kapurthala; three each in Mansa and Barnala; two in Rupnagar; and one each in Faridkot, Tarn Taran and Hoshiarpur, according to the bulletin.Twenty people who tested positive for COVID-19 on Tuesday have travel history to other states. As many as 222 COVID-19 patients recovered from the disease and were discharged from various hospitals. A total of 3,047 people have been cured of the disease so far, the bulletin said.There are 1,245 active cases in the state as of now, it said.
Amritsar continued to top the COVID-19 tally in the state with 792 cases, followed by 602 in Jalandhar, 615 in Ludhiana, 239 in Sangrur, 226 in Patiala, 219 in Mohali and 195 in Gurdaspur.Pathankot has 188 cases, Tarn Taran 186, Hoshiarpur 165, SBS Nagar 125, Fatehgarh Sahib 100, Faridkot 99, Rupnagar 91, Moga 85, Muktsar 84, Bathinda 79, Ferozepur 77, Fazilka 75, Kapurthala 67, Barnala 46 and Mansa 42.
Nine patients are in critical condition and on ventilator support, while 19 are on oxygen support, the bulletin stated. A total of 2,55,380 samples have been taken so far for testing, it said.
In a bid to curtail spread of corona virus in specific areas, Punjab Government has implemented a stringent containment strategy under which 19 containment zones have been established in 8 districts containing population of about 25000, so far.
Giving details, Health Minister Balbir Singh Sidhu said that in urban areas, containment zones are clearly demarcated as a street or two adjoining streets, a Mohalla or a residential society. Containment as well as micro containment zone is depending upon the total number of the COVID-19 cases in specific area so to ensure the proper utilization of man power to conduct the activities such as screening, tracing, testing and counseling of all high risk contacts.
He said that in the rural areas, it can encompass the whole village or be limited to a part of village. The principle underlying this detailing is to focus on effective containment of smaller/limited areas. Early identification has proved successful in containing the spread of the infection. Thus the whole population in the containment areas is screened regularly and all possible suspected cases of COVID-19 are tested and positives shifted to isolation centres.
To ensure the safety of high risk patients, the Minister said that instructions have been issued to the Civil Surgeons that high risk patients those aged more than 60 years or those with co-morbidities like diabetes mellitus, hypertension etc will not be admitted at COVID Care Centre (CCC). No Level-I & Level-II patients to be admitted at Level-III facility. Patients at the CCC will be shifted to the Level-II facility only if indicated according to the referral criteria already issued. Every COVID Care Centre must have a dedicated Basic Life Support Ambulance (BLSA) equipped with sufficient oxygen support on 24x7 basis.
(editor@dailyworld.in)