Mumbai: Twenty-five more people died from COVID-19 in Maharashtra on Thursday and the total number of deaths to 97. With 229 more people testing positive, the number of coronavirus cases in the state reached 1,364, a health official said, which is the highest in the country.
“Both the number of new patients and that of deaths are highest for a single day so far,” the official said.
Nine deaths and 162 of the new cases were reported in Mumbai. With the highest number of cases at 876, the city is gearing up for an extended battle against COVID-19. Pune recorded 14 of the new deaths.
The lockdown extension for Mumbai and Pune is definitely being considered while non-affected areas may see some relaxations, especially for farming-related activities.
The final decision will be announced by the state’s cabinet after Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s video-conference with Chief Ministers on Friday. Odisha has already extended the lockdown till April 30.
The worst affected areas of Mumbai are places like Worli and Prabhadevi which fall within the G-South Ward of the Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation where 184 cases have been detected. D Ward, E Ward, and K-West Ward each have recorded between 40 and 60 cases.
Worli Koliwada, a fishing village with a population of 80,000 people has been declared a containment area and so have several other locations in Worli and Prabhadevi. All families living in the area are going to be screened with doctors and medical staff going to each and every home in the area.
Another area of concern is Dharavi, Asia’s largest slum with a population of around 8 lakh residents. The area has reported 13 cases until the previous health bulletin and now has several containment areas with severe restrictions on movement.
Mumbai now has 381 containment areas in all with strict curfew measures being implemented in these places.
The city is also preparing a mega-quarantine centre at the NSCI Dome, an indoor stadium used to host sporting events and functions, with 500 beds with scope for further expansion. More such locations are being surveyed to ensure the city has enough quarantine beds.
Maharashtra Chief Minister Uddhav Thackeray, in his address to the state on Wednesday, told citizens that they would have to stay at home, while talking about how Singapore has imposed a fresh lockdown and how long it took for things to return to normal in China’s Wuhan, where the virus originated late last year.
Authorities attribute the high number of cases to more testing. The World Health Organisation or WHO says more testing is a key step in the fight against the virus and cities like Mumbai have ramped up testing with more testing kits being procured and private labs conducting tests as well. They say the percentage of those who test positive has hovered around 5 per cent of total number of tests and that is a good indicator.
Authorities say given that Mumbai is one of the largest international hubs in the country with flights to almost every part of the world, the first cases came in from abroad. Initially those who tested positive were those who had travel history to the affected countries or were in contact with those who had travelled recently. Measures like containment had started from mid-March but critical steps like a nationwide lockdown was implemented only from March 22 and they hope these steps, including the possibility of an extended lockdown, will stop the spread in Mumbai.