City
Epaper

75.3% dead are over 60 yrs; HCQ side-effects research is on: Govt

By IANS | Updated: April 18, 2020 19:00 IST

The Union Health Ministry on Saturday said 83 per cent of coronavirus cases had comorbidities and 75.3 per cent people who succumbed to the viral infection are above 60 years.

Open in App

New Delhi, April 18 The Union Health Ministry on Saturday said 83 per cent of coronavirus cases had comorbidities and 75.3 per cent people who succumbed to the viral infection are above 60 years.

The mortality rate due to COVID-19 in India is around 3.3 per cent and research on side effects of hydroxychloroquine (HCQ) is underway, said the ministry.

Lav Agarwal, Joint Secretary Health Ministry, said the mortality rate due to COVID-19 in the country is around 3.3 per cent and 83% cases had comorbidities.

Detailing on the age profile of the deceased, Agarwal said "14.4% people are in 0 to 45 years age group; 10.3% people are in 45-60 years age group; 33.1% are in the 60-75 years age group; and 42.2% are from 75 years and above age group. The recovery rate of the people from coronavirus infection is 13.85%", said Agarwal.

Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR), Dr Raman R Gangakhedkar, senior Scientist of the Epidemiology and Communicable Diseases-I (ECD-I), responding to a query on the HCQ side-effects said it has conducted cohort study and no trial study yet, as evidence base to conduct the trial is not available.

The study on HCQ requires enrollment of at least 480 patients and it will require a minimum 8 weeks or maybe two-and-a-half months. "During the lockdown period, it is difficult to work on the study. Therefore, we launched another study where healthcare started taking HCQ, as they heard the study on this is about to begin. The average of these people was 35 years. The most prominent side-effect noticed was abdominal pain, nearly 10 per cent. Nearly 6 per cent reported nausea. The other people were found in less proportion - the percentage of people who suffered hypoglycemia was 1.3 percent", said Gangakhedkar.

He added that 22 per cent of these healthcare workers had diabetes, blood pressure, respiratory illness and coronary vascular disease.

"Nearly 14% people despite being healthcare workers did not do ECG; and AIIMS is conducting study on HCQ, both therapeutic and prophylactic", Gangakhedkar added.

( With inputs from IANS )

Tags: Joint secretary health ministryLav agarwalindiaNew DelhiUnion Health MinistryThe new delhi municipal council
Open in App

Related Stories

Maharashtra"This is Betrayal": Former MP Calls Out Prada for Allegedly Copying Kolhapuri Chappal Design

InternationalWhen Will Russia Deliver More S-400 Missiles to India? Major Update Revealed - Here’s Why It Was Delayed

NationalIndia Extends Airspace Ban on Pakistan-Based Aircraft Till July 24

NationalOperation Sindhu: “We Saw Drones, Missiles,” Say Evacuated Students Recounting Life in Iran’s Warzone

NationalCOVID-19 Update: Mumbai Cases Drop Sharply; India’s Active Tally Drops By 428

Health Realted Stories

HealthCentre revamps Sugamya Bharat app to enhance accessibility for disabled, elderly

HealthMP battles maternal, infant mortality crisis as progress lags behind national average: SRS report

HealthNew AI tool to revolutionise personalised cancer treatment

HealthIndia’s Science and Technology Clusters to boost innovation ecosystem: Ajay Sood

HealthStudy shows sleep shaped by environments not just personal habits