NE NEWS BUREAU
JAIPUR, APRIL 7
Bhilwara, once labeled as the epicentre of COVID-19, is coming back on track after the dedicated efforts of Ashok Gehlot-led Rajasthan Government and local administration. Healthcare workers, home guards, police personnel, government officials and every other individual related to the screening of COVID-19 patients and are working without any leaves, almost all hours a day. It’s just not the duty they are serving, it’s a city, a state and a country they are saving.
Watch on @LRC_NDTV | Raghu Sharma, Health Minister, Rajasthan on how #COVID19 cases were largely restricted to Bhilwara, a coronavirus hotspot in the state. pic.twitter.com/zpWsbfTKlx
— NDTV (@ndtv) April 6, 2020
The first case in Rajasthan was reported on March 2, and strict actions were taken in the state on the very first day. “Nearly 5 crore people are screened and 1 crore 17 lakh household have been tested till now. Things were also controlled with the imposition of curfew and today, 34 places are under curfew in Rajasthan,” said Chief Minister Ashok Gehlot.
https://twitter.com/niro60487270/status/1247317151876173825?s=20
Adding further, “2 km area of a person found COVID-19 positive is sealed and checks are done. Today, out of the total number of positives in Rajasthan, nearly 30-32 are the evacuees from Iran at Jaisalmer and Jodhpur. People with travel history or any contact with positive patients are being isolated and checked. The only worry is of people who are coming out positive and have no history of either travel or contact.”
Team led by these two Civil Servants, Rohit Kumar Singh (Principal Secretary Health, Rajasthan) & Rajendre Bhatt (District Magistrate, Bhilwara) have demonstrated in Bhilwara District that the scourge of Corona virus can be managed. Worthy of emulation. @nexusofgood #nexusofgood pic.twitter.com/xHGKEliJNv
— . (@swarup58) April 7, 2020
“Officials of the Central government are in touch with the Chief Secretary and they mention Bhilwara whenever they have video-conferencing. We sealed the borders the day we got to know about the case of the doctor being positive with the virus in Bhilwara and it is becoming a learning ground after the commendable efforts.”
”22 lakhs families from villages, nearly 10 lakh households in the city were tested and that’s how Bhilwara is today an example in the fight against corona in India,” said Chief Minister Ashok Gehlot.
The efforts of @ashokgehlot51 and his vision is highly appreciable. #Rajasthan was first state to impose lockdown. The #Bhilwara is the successful case study that every State shall look into. @RajCMO @narendramodi #राजस्थान_सतर्क_है #Covid_19india pic.twitter.com/6cMf008IxD
— Hitanshu Kaushal (@HitanshuKaushal) April 7, 2020
In India, few hotspots of COVID-19 were listed, which were also known as the epicentres of coronavirus. Bhilwara emerged as one from Rajasthan in the list of 10 major spots. At one time, 12 out of 18 cases of the state were from here and Bhilwara was leading the tally. With 27 cases, the district was considered the worst hit in Rajasthan and for a few days, at the national level too.
In the last eight days, between March 30 and April 6, the number of novel coronavirus cases in Bhilwara has risen by only one. @AnkurWadhawanhttps://t.co/2Lf50Vm602
— IndiaToday (@IndiaToday) April 7, 2020
But following the hard work and efforts, the city is now standing tall with 17 recoveries with 11 discharged. “We are now on a war-footing level and working in a 6-part process beginning with the imposition of curfew, coordination work of police surveying colonies where the visitor’s of Bangar Hospital, where it all began, might be staying,” said Harendra Mahawar, SP, Bhilwara. He further added, more than 5,000 people were listed who were consulted by the COVID-19 positive doctor of Bangar Hospital. Patients of IPD and OPD were also screened.
#Rajasthan Update on #WorldHealthDay – Total #Corona + cases rise by 24 to reach 325. #GoodNews– no fresh cases from #Bhilwara. But #Jaipur remain a big worry with 103 cases now. #Jodhpur is the new worry with total of 30 cases. #CoronaUpdatesInIndia pic.twitter.com/kMePZCTIXY
— rajan mahan (@rajanmahan) April 7, 2020
To break the chain of contamination, nearly 6,000 people were identified and put under isolation in only 2 days. The struggle just began as patients of almost 19 districts and 4 states were in the hospital when a sudden rise of positive patients was reported. Every single individual was put in strict isolation and a curfew was imposed within 15 minutes on strict orders without harming the supply of food & other essentials. CLG members, community leaders, and religious gurus were approached and appealed to motivate the public to stay home. Initiatives were launched, appealing videos were made and few unwanted social elements faced legal action too. Nearly 600 vehicles have also been seized.
On #WorldHealthDay today, we thank our doctors, nurses & all health workers, who have been fighting this battle against #corona in India & world over. Their selfless service, sacrifices & treating patients putting their own lives at risk is a great service to humanity.
— Ashok Gehlot (@ashokgehlot51) April 7, 2020
“Team of healthcare officials led by Chief Medical & Health Officer Dr. Mushtaq Khan did a commendable job followed by tremendous efforts from the local administration and other staff,” said Mahawar.
Speaking on the same, Dr. Mushtaq Khan, CMHO stated that, “We worked parallelly on precaution and treatment, both were done together to control the outbreak. The main task was to identify the relatives of the first patient and isolate them. I would say that it was done on a war-footing level and everything got under control at the right time.”
Adding further, “We are regularly tracking the patients even after we release them. As of now, 11 patients have been discharged after 3 negative reports of each one of them. People trusted us, they supported us and with efforts from both sides, today Bhilwara is standing strong and the lockdown has played a major role in breaking the chain.”
Speaking on the developments, Rajendra Bhatt, District Magistrate, Bhilwara said, “We have deployed corona fighters in villages who are led by the corona captain, the SDM. They submit daily reports on the screenings in rural areas and if there is any sign of community spread. I can proudly say that as of now, the numbers have gone down and each & every department is working together to fight this pandemic. Whether it is food & supplies, police, home guards, medical workers, and the public, we are fighting the battle together & have almost come out of it.”
“We have extended a total shutdown for a few more days and people will get everything they need at their doorstep. No shop, dairy, the medical store will be open. If people want something, they will directly call us, whether it is medicine, food or anything else. For this, at least 4-5 control rooms of several departments are being operated and we are fulfilling demands. It is a necessary step to control the outbreak and bring out a total COVID-19-free Bhilwara in the coming few days. With the pace we are getting desired results, we will stop this soon.”
As Chief Minister Ashok Gehlot has promised ‘koi bhuka nahi soyega’ (nobody will sleep hungry), we are making every essential reach household as per their demand.
For 3 days now, the city which was named COVID-19 patients very frequently has reported only 1 positive who had a history of visiting the corona affected hospital. Adding another feather in the cap, the hard work, and dedication of district administration has also recovered patients. Once standing high with 27 patients, the district now has only 7 COVID-19 patients as reports of 17 have now come negative and two lost their lives due to other illnesses.
“We sealed the city and later the whole district boundaries were strictly sealed. The population of the city has been screened at least 3 times now and people having normal cough & cold due to weather change (influenza-like illness), who were in thousands, were also checked and surveyed. Those having symptoms were put under isolation or quarantine. People also cooperated and it was under control. There was a time when Rajasthan had 18 patients and 12 were from Bhilwara,” said Rajendra Bhatt, DM, Bhilwara.