COVID-19 third wave: Over 70% of January deaths in Karnataka were in ICUs
The Hindu
Over 70% of the 645 COVID-19 deaths reported during January happened in ICUs and over two-third were due to comorbidities, especially in those aged above 60 years, according to an initial assessment of the district death audits by the Karnataka Health Department
While over 70% of the 645 COVID-19 deaths reported during January happened in ICUs, over two-thirds were due to comorbidities, especially in those aged above 60, according to an initial assessment of the district death audits by the State Health Department.
To identify deaths that can be attributed only to COVID-19 and the underlying cause in deaths where COVID-19 findings were incidental, the State had recently taken up a comprehensive audit of deaths that happened during the third wave. All districts and the BBMP were asked to audit the 645 deaths reported from January 1 till January 31. The department has now received audit reports from all the districts.
According to the initial assessment, only 13 of the 645 deaths are paediatric deaths and most of these child cases had pre-existing medical conditions. So far, a total of 70 children in the 0-9 age group and 101 in the 10-19 age group have succumbed to the disease, according to data from the State War Room.
State Health Commissioner D. Randeep said that according to initial observations, almost half of the 645 deaths happened within two-three days of admission in hospitals. “This includes brought-dead cases. Late reporting and late admissions seem to be the reason for this,” he said.
A 13-member State-level team, headed by K. Ravi, Professor and Head of the Department of Medicine at Bangalore Medical College and Research Institute, was formed recently. “This team will compile and summarise the district reports. The comprehensive death audit of a representative number of cases at the State level will shed more light and help us chalk out early intervention strategies,” he said.
“We have noticed that a majority of the deaths in the third wave could have been prevented if patients had reported early,” he said.
With the third wave waning, there has been a steady decline in the number of people requiring critical care. As of Saturday [Friday 19], 550 patients required oxygen. While 219 occupied ICU beds, 56 patients are on ventilators, and the rest are in high dependency units, according to data from the Health Department. A month ago, the number of people requiring critical care was nearly three times higher.
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