Srinagar Apr 06: While the routine work in Kashmir hospitals has been put on hold in view of coronavirus crisis, Doctors Association Kashmir (DAK) on Monday said hospitals in the valley continue to provide care for urgent situations and emergency patients.
“People should not hesitate to go to a hospital if they have an emergency,” said DAK President Dr Nisar ul Hassan.
He said people have been asking if it is still possible for them to go to the hospitals for problems not related to coronavirus.
They are a little more apprehensive about going to a hospital. They choose not to go to hospital out of fear of contracting the virus.
Dr Nisar said it is important for people to know that medical staff are available round the clock to attend and manage all emergencies. They should not think there is no recourse for them.
People must know that there are separate clinics and isolation wards in hospitals for CoVID-19 patients.
He said people shouldn’t lose sight of the fact that they should seek the emergency room if they are actually in distress. It should never be discouraged based on any degree of concern that the healthcare system is under strain.
“If you are having a chest pain, if you are having a severe abdominal pain or something like that, don’t push it off until it becomes catastrophic,” Dr Nisar said.
“In the midst of the outbreak people will still have heart attacks, strokes. Babies will still be born. Appendixes will still burst. These are life-threatening conditions and can’t be taken care from home,” he said
Dr Nisar said hospitals across the valley have cancelled routine visits and postponed all procedures and surgeries that are not urgent or emergent. This has been done as an abundance of caution during this serious outbreak and historical public health emergency.
“The move will free up space and beds, preserve supplies and ensure medical staff are available in case of any eventuality,” he said.
“For minor ailments or chronic conditions like hypertension or diabetes people can call helpline numbers of hospitals that can provide them medical advice and dispense drugs without having to come to the medical facility,” said Dr Nisar.
Category: Union Territory
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Don’t hesitate to visit hospitals in case of emergency: DAK
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Red Zone Chattabal area sealed by Srinagar admin
Srinagar, April 06: The district administration Srinagar on Monday said that Chattabal area that has already been declared as red zone has been sealed from today onwards.
As per wire service—Kashmir News Observer (KNO), in a tweet, Srinagar district administration, stated that “All 16 entry/exit points closed. Essential services, medical teams will move under supervision. Please follow announcements being made locally. Urgent,” the tweet read.
Chattabal area has already reported a few positive Covid-19 cases and the area was declared as red zone recently by the Srinagar administration.
The houses of those who tested positive were sanitized and the SMC teams sprayed disinfectants in the nearby houses—(KNO)
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3 more persons test positive; Kashmir’s COVID-19 tally rises to 109
Srinagar, April 06 : The number of coronavirus cases climbed to 109 in Jammu and Kashmir as three more persons under quarantine tested positive for the dreaded diseases on Monday.
Among them, sources said one is from frontier Uri town of Baramulla district while two others are from Srinagar district. The case from the Uri is said to be 41-year-old woman whose husband, a teacher has tested positive last week. Her sample was sent from GMC Baramulla to SKIMS and it came out to be negative, the sources said. The Srinagar cases are said to be from Nowshera and Chattabal Srinagar.
With these 3 fresh cases, 109 people have tested positive for the coronavirus disease and of them, 102 are active case—84 in Kashmir and 18 in Jammu division. Among all 108 cases, four have recovered and were discharged while two others have died. (GNS)
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22 Covid-19 suspects test negative in Tangmarg
Baramulla, April 5: Over 22 Covid-19 suspects from Tangmarg area of North Kashmir’s Baramulla district have been tested negative and were allowed to go home on Monday.An official told Kashmir News Trust that over 22 people were quarantined in a hotel at Mangloora Kunzar hotel after a Covid-19 case surfaced in the area. All these suspected persons were tested and they turn out to be negative. “These people were today allowed to go to their homes as they are all Covid-19 free,” the official said. Pertinently, Tangmarg area witnessed a death of a Covid-19 patient while the son of the deceased who is a teacher by profession has also been tested positive. (KNT)
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3 South Kashmir Families Approach Police, Claim Their Kin Among 5 Militants Killed in Kupwara
Police Reserves Comment, Says Identification Not Done As Yet
Srinagar, April 06: At least three families from South Kashmir have approached police, claiming that their kin are among five militants killed in a gunfight in snowbound woods of Kupwara in north Kashmir.
The families, two from Shopian district and another one from the Kulgam district are said to have reached Kupwara, demanding handing over of the bodies for performing the last rites. However, police said that it was premature to comment as the identification process would be done once the bodies are handed over by the army.
Sources told GNS that the families have received information through anonymous means that their kin have been killed in the gunfight. Police sources that the intelligence inputs also suggest to the possibility of at least three militants being residents of Shopian and Kulgam but maintained that it would be concluded after completing the identification process.
SSP Kupwara Ambarkar Shriram Dinkar (IPS) reserved comment regarding it. “When identification of the (slain militants) has not been done, there is no need to comment upon it,” he told GNS.
About the operation which saw the killing of several army soldiers including a JCO besides five militants, the SSP said: “From last four days, an operation is going on. It was in an infiltration bid and operation had been launched based on a specific intelligence report. It is a difficult terrain as such the operation got prolonged. It is still snowbound. There is no motorable road. This operation has been completed successfully amid the difficult situation.”
He also termed it as “a very big success” for the security establishment. “While the world is under the grip of coronavirus, Pakistan continues to sponsor terror and people working against humanity have been given a befitting reply. 5 militants have been killed. A search operation is still going on and bodies are being retrieved and their identification has not been done so far,” he added. (GNS)
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3 More Soldiers Succumb, Kupwara toll mounts to 13
Srinagar, April 6: Three more soldiers, who were injured in a gunfight with militants in Kupwara woods have succumbed to their wounds, talking the number of army personnel killed in the operation to eight including a Junior Commissioned Officer (JCO). Besides the soldiers, five militants were also killed in the gunfight which sporadically continued for several days reaching the peak on Sunday.
Official sources said that while one soldier died on the spot, a number of others were injured in the fierce gunbattle in the woods. Four of the injured personnel including a JCO from elite para force succumbed to injuries on Sunday while three others lost the battle for life at the army’s health facility today.
On 4th day of the operation on Saturday evening, the army had rushed elite 4-para troopers to Rangdoori, Guguldara and Teen Behak area of Jumgund.
The operation was launched initially by army’s 8 JAT after intercepting movement of a group of militants on Wednesday.
Besides, they said, the searches continued along Awaoora, Kumkadi, Zurhuma, Safawali, Batpora, Haihama areas by the joint team of the army’s 41 RR, 57 RR, 160 TA and SOG Kupwara. (GNS)
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J&K: Anti-terror mechanism used to track people escaping corona quarantine
Srinagar: Officials said the authorities roped in the state intelligence machinery who were tasked to track, identify and bring such people to quarantine facilities
Human Intelligence, a weapon used for busting terror groups in Jammu and Kashmir, has come in handy to trace people who concealed their travel history, besides in retracing the steps of coronavirus positive patients, in an operation that led to tracking of over 1,000 people who have since been quarantined in various parts of the union territory.
Fighting this new battle, officials said the authorities roped in the state intelligence machinery who were tasked to track, identify and bring such people to quarantine facilities.
The intelligence personnel along with the regular police, which remain at the forefront in the fight against terror groups in the union territory, were now complementing the district administration in its efforts to ensure the success of the lockdown, besides tracking people who hid their travel history from the authorities.
According to a report submitted to the Centre, over 1,000 people who had either traveled out of the state or abroad were brought to quarantine centres between March 15 and 31 and their identification and verification was going on, the officials said.
Also, more than 28,000 people are under surveillance which included 10,600 who have been either quarantined at government facilities or in home-isolation, the officials said.
There have been 92 positive cases so far in the union territory out of which two have died.
A total of 34 hotspots have been identified in Jammu and Kashmir which include: seven in Pulwama, five in Srinagar, and four each in Bandipora and Budgam; two in Shopian, one each in Ganderbal and Baramulla in Kashmir division; and five in Rajouri, four in Jammu and one in Udhampur district of Jammu division.
The process was intensified after the death of a COVID-19 positive Kashmiri businessman on March 26. The immediate need was to track people whom he had met since his arrival in Jammu from Delhi and Uttar Pradesh during which he had attended the Tablighi Jamaat function at Nizamuddin, the officials said.
Upon his arrival in the Union Territory, the businessman held a congregation at Samba in Jammu before returning to Sopore in North Kashmir where he participated in a religious function.
“We knew that it’s a chain reaction. He would have met one and the chain continues. So it was necessary to immediately break the chain,” said an official of the Jammu and Kashmir administration, spoking on condition of anonymity.
During all this, intelligence officials had to move in their resources of human intelligence to track people he had met and the result was that some coronavirus positive cases were located in parts of Jammu as well as Kashmir, the official said.
The information shared by the intelligence also helped in tracking people who had travelled in trains and flight, the official said.
All field units were geared up to meet this new kind of challenge unlike an anti-terror operations where a militant was tracked and a crack team carried out an encounter, the official said.
From early March, there were inputs that some people, who had gone on religious pilgrimages, started breaking their journeys upon their arrival in India and preferred to travel by train or road to various districts of Jammu and the valley, said an official on condition of anonymity.
An immediate plan was drawn up and passports issued to residents of Jammu and Kashmir were scanned through immigration office in the national capital and ascertain who all have traveled abroad and did not go for health check-up which had become mandatory by the middle of March, the officials said.
Police teams were fanned to homes of those who had traveled abroad and the persons were taken to quarantine centres, they said, adding at some places altercation took place while and others there was no resistance.
The operation has also been able to identify and sent to quarantine as many as 139 people, who were either at Tablighi Jamaat headquarters at Nizamuddin in Delhi or had come in contact with its members who had traveled to Jammu and Kashmir (PTI)
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Decision on reopening schools, colleges on Apr 14 after reviewing COVID-19 situation: HRD Minister.
The government will take a decision on reopening of schools and colleges on April 14 after reviewing the coronavirus situation in the country, Union HRD Minister Ramesh Pokhriyal ‘Nishank’ said on Sunday.
In an interview to PTI, he said the safety of students and teachers is of utmost importance to the government and his ministry is prepared to ensure there is no academic loss to students if schools and colleges needed to remain shut beyond April 14.
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Summer temperature won’t help contain coronavirus: WHO
New Delhi: Though many experts have expressed optimism towards the onset of summer in the fight against the coronavirus pandemic, the World Health Organisation (WHO) on Sunday said high temperature would not finish the virus.
The WHO, in a series of tweets, busted several myths about coronavirus, especially regarding rise in temperature.
“Exposing yourself to sun or to temperatures higher than 25 degree Celsius doesn”t prevent Covid-19. You can catch Covid-19, no matter how sunny or hot the weather is,” the WHO said.
Stating that countries having higher temperature didn’t remain unaffected, it said the only way to be safe was to ensure hygiene. “Countries with hot weather have also reported Covid-19 cases. To protect yourself, make sure you clean your hands frequently and thoroughly, and avoid touching your eyes, mouth and nose,” the WHO said.
The WHO said drinking methanol, ethanol or bleach wouldn’t prevent or cure Covid-19 and could be extremely dangerous, as these were used in cleaning products to kill the virus on surfaces. “If consumed, they will not kill the virus in the body, but will harm internal organs,” it said.
Also drinking alcohol was no protection against coronavirus, it said and added, frequent or excessive liquor consumption could increase risk of health problems.
On myth around holding breath for a few minutes to check coronavirus, the WHO said, “Being able to hold your breath for 10 seconds or more without coughing or feeling discomfort doesn’t mean you are free from the coronavirus or any other lung disease.”
The best way to confirm about the disease was laboratory test. “You can’t confirm it with this breathing exercise, which can even be dangerous,” said the WHO. (IANS)