Advertisement
The Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR) will conduct a ‘serosurvey’ which involves testing blood serum of people to check for the prevalence of antibodies against coronavirus infection.
The final results of the serosurvey conducted by the ICMR in May, which focused on infections of mid-April is still under process, Rajesh Bhushan, Officer on Special Duty in the Union Health Ministry said on Thursday.
“The serosurvey that ICMR conducted across the country focused on infections of mid-April and preliminary findings were shared. As you know all such sero-surveillance studies or any other scientific study is subject to peer-review and those inputs are also incorporated. So that process is going on,” he told reporters.
Related Articles
Advertisement
The ICMR had earlier said on the basis of the data compiled from 65 districts out of 83 districts across the country in the first part of the sero-surveillance study, 0.73 percent of the population surveyed showed evidence of past exposure to SARS-CoV-2.
Bhushan further said the findings of the serosurvey, which has been done in Delhi by the National Centre for Disease Control (NCDC) as a part of which 22,000 samples were collected from June 27 to July 5 from 11 districts, is being processed.
“In the near future, ICMR is planning a follow-up serosurvey pan-India to the earlier serosurvey that they had done for mid-April infections,” Bhushan explained.
“The serosurvey conducted in May had two parts estimating the fraction of the general population that has been infected with SARS-CoV-2 and estimating the number of people who have been infected with coronavirus in containment zones of hotspot cities,” ICMR officials had earlier said.
The IgG antibodies against an infection take around 15 days to develop in the body.
India saw a record single-day surge of 24,879 coronavirus infections, which pushed the nationwide COVID-19 tally to 7,67,296 on Thursday, while the death toll climbed to 21,129 with 487 new fatalities, the Health Ministry data updated at 8 am showed.