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“The nation in a post-coronavirus future could well look back on the pandemic period as a blessing in disguise if Indians imbibe hand, respiratory and environmental hygiene and practice it in their everyday lives,” the minister said.
Underlining the importance of the lockdown, which has been extended till May 17, the minister said health should be on the radar just as much as the economy.
“The government has to do a balancing act,” he said.
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“Once the havoc caused by the virus subsides and the crisis blows over, people may remember it as a blessing in disguise,” Vardhan said.
He added that India has so far been able to keep itself from slipping into the stage of community transmission of the novel coronavirus.
“By now we know that fighting coronavirus is no rocket science. If behavioral changes such as hand, environmental and respiratory hygiene, which are being practiced more rigorously during this period, get imbibed in society it will become the new normal,” Vardhan said.
Such practices will bring down the instances of communicable diseases and society will evolve for the better, he stressed.
Other than smallpox and polio, no other viral infection has been completely eradicated from this country. Other diseases keep recurring, the minister said, indicating that COVID-19 might be here for the long haul.
“But every cloud has a silver lining,” he said.
The situation posed by the COVID-19 pandemic can be seen as an opportunity to shore up health infrastructure and indigenous production of medical equipment and protective gear under the ‘Make in India’ initiative, the minister explained.
“We have ramped up the production of COVID-19 protective gears like PPE (personal protection equipment) and N-95 masks. Testing facilities have been scaled up significantly, he said.
Efforts are also on to ramp up the production of APIs (active pharmaceutical ingredients), the raw material for pharmaceuticals, Vardhan added.
“Thus, this pandemic can be seen as an opportunity to boost the indigenous production of such items, thereby reducing India’s dependency on foreign countries for them which are in high demand globally due to the pandemic,” he said.
The minister also discussed the chaos outside liquor vends across the country on Monday as several states relaxed the lockdown in accordance with guidelines from the Union Home Ministry and people in several places jostled and shoved to stock up on their alcohol without any thought to social distancing norms.
“We have to weigh every decision objectively and predict their consequences before implementing them to ensure there is no spike in cases.”
He said the doubling rate of cases in the country has been showing regular improvement and stands at over 12 days now as against three days before March 25, when the nationwide lockdown began.
“The recovery rate has also progressively improved,” he said.
Around 27.40 percent patients have recovered so far in the country.