Ministry of Home Affairs extends COVID-19 guidelines till November 30

The earlier guidelines are applicable till October 31

October 28, 2021 05:20 pm | Updated 11:26 pm IST - New Delhi

Union Home Secretary Ajay Bhalla said there should be continued focus on the five-fold strategy i.e. Test-Track-Treat-Vaccination and adherence to Covid-appropriate behaviour, to safely navigate through the festive season to avoid the possibility of surge in COVID-19 cases.

Union Home Secretary Ajay Bhalla said there should be continued focus on the five-fold strategy i.e. Test-Track-Treat-Vaccination and adherence to Covid-appropriate behaviour, to safely navigate through the festive season to avoid the possibility of surge in COVID-19 cases.

The Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) has extended the COVID-19 guidelines issued under the Disaster Management Act till November 30.

The Ministry said in an order that the previous order issued on September 28, to ensure compliance with the “prompt and effective containment measures for COVID-19” will remain “in force up to October 31”.

The MHA asked States to take relevant action under various provisions of the Disaster Management Act for strict implementation of containment measures.

The earlier guidelines are applicable till October 31.

In a communication to chief secretaries of all states and union territories, Union Home Secretary Ajay Bhalla said as there has been localised spread of the virus in a few states, the disease continues to be a public health challenge in the country.

Last month, he had said that there was a possibility that Covid-appropriate behaviour might not be adhered to strictly, especially during the festival season and hence it was critical to enforce guidelines which allowed regular festivities in a cautious, safe and Covid-appropriate manner.

Mr. Bhalla had said the daily cases and overall number of patients in the country were declining steadily but there were localised spread of virus in a few states and COVID-19 continued to be a public health challenge in the country.

The Home Secretary said states and union territories, on a regular basis, should closely monitor case positivity, hospital, ICU beds occupancy of every district falling under their jurisdiction.

He said there should be continued focus on the five-fold strategy i.e. Test-Track-Treat-Vaccination and adherence to Covid-appropriate behaviour, to safely navigate through the festive season to avoid the possibility of surge in COVID-19 cases.

He said the State governments and Union Territory administrations should continue with their vaccination programmes with focus to accelerate inoculation of eligible age groups and prioritisation of second dose to eligible beneficiaries.

The Home Secretary urged the chief secretaries to issue directions to the district and all other local authorities concerned, to take necessary measures as advised by Union Health Ministry advisory for prompt and effective management of COVID-19.

India's total tally of COVID-19 cases rose to 3,42,31,809 with 16,156 more people testing positive, while the active cases declined to 1,60,989, the lowest in 243 days, according to Union health ministry data updated on Thursday.

The death toll climbed to 4,56,386 with 733 fresh fatalities including 622 from Kerala, according to the data updated at 8:00 am.

Of the 622 deaths in Kerala, 93 were reported in the last few days, 330 were those which were not confirmed until June 18 last year due to lack of adequate documentation and 199 were designated as Covid deaths after receiving appeals based on the new guidelines of the Centre and Supreme Court directions, a State government release said.

The Health Ministry said the daily rise in new coronavirus infections has been below 30,000 for 34 straight days and less than 50,000 daily new cases have been reported for 123 consecutive days now.

(With inputs from PTI)

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