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India crosses the 1 lakh (ONE HUNDRED THOUSAND) tests per day milestone and begins work on the next

Raj-Hindustani

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In India’s Covid-19 testing strategy, a hard push from PM Modi and a dose of reality
In the big picture, India has moved from 13 labs in the first week of February to 123 labs on March 24, the day Prime Minister Narendra Modi ordered a nationwide lockdown, to 609 labs
INDIA Updated: May 25, 2020 22:18 IST
Shishir0001-klw-U20768783376H2-250x250%40HT-Web.jpg

Shishir Gupta
Hindustan Times, New Delhi
htls-d01-s01-modi_7d3f9ed6-9ea7-11ea-95c6-464eb77020f3.jpg

Prime Minister Narendra Modi in the early days of the Covid-19 outbreak, told the country’s top scientists in and outside the Indian Council of Medical Research to expand testing facilities.(Amal KS/HT PHOTO)
told Vogue’s India website, earlier this month.

The difficult decision of the national lockdown bought them time as it slowed down the spread of the virus and gave the government time to prepare the healthcare infrastructure to trace, track, test, quarantine and treat people.

“We adopted an intelligent testing strategy to remain ahead of the virus. So in the beginning when the infection was entering the country from abroad, we centered our efforts to set up the initial burst of laboratories in cities…. This focus kept on shifting on the basis of our analysis of the likely hotspots of the infection,” a government official explained.

Like before the government started allowing the migrants to go back home, testing facilities preceded them in states such as Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, West Bengal and Odisha.

That was the most difficult part since India doesn’t have a medical college at the district level, and district-level hospitals don’t have the specialised set-up.

_78f06292-9e8f-11ea-95c6-464eb77020f3.png

“This has been quite challenging as the labs outside the medical college systems have meager experience of handling human infectious material,” a health ministry official recalled.

All underserved areas were mapped and Covid-19 molecular diagnostic capacity reached in ‘difficult to reach’ areas such as Arunachal Pradesh, Nagaland, Sikkim, Ladakh, Goa, Andaman & Nicobar Islands.

In the big picture, India moved from 13 labs in the first week of February to 123 labs on March 24, the day Prime Minister Narendra Modi ordered a nationwide lockdown. Days before the lockdown is formally lifted later this month-end, India has 609 testing labs in all states and UTs.

Jugaad, or a frugal innovation, certainly helped when the imported Chinese testing kits didn’t.

TrueNat — a diagnostic machine used for testing drug-resistant tuberculosis — was tested and validated by ICMR to screen people for the Sars-Cov-2 virus (which causes the coronavirus disease) to boost testing capacities.

Since TrueNat platform comes with an inbuilt sample collection in viral lysis buffer, the virus is inactivated and the biosafety requirements are minimal while handling the sample.

There were 367 of these machines in different states for TB diagnosis. These are being used for Covid-19 also . Besides, supplies of 608 additional TrueNAT machines - each has a capacity for 10-12 tests in a day - are also being mobilised to be ready for deployment in June.

With supplies of these machines, it would be possible to have Covid-19 testing capacities in districts with no capacity for carrying out the RT-PCR tests, or reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction test that is considered the gold standard for detecting Sars-Cov-2 virus.
https://www.hindustantimes.com/indi...-of-reality/story-OdltrmDPeTD4BRPUEM0qMP.html
 
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Lakh is not an English word.
Please keep to using English words.
 
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Lakh is not an English word.
Please keep to using English words.

https://www.oxfordlearnersdictionaries.com/us/definition/english/lakh

Many Indian words entered the English lexicon over the centuries and are in use in everyday discourse. ‘Hobson-Jobson’, a glossary published in 1886, included as many as 2000 entries of words and terms from Indian languages during the British ‘raj’.

Some of the commonly used words of Indian etymology are: loot, bungalow, avatar, mantra, chutney, cot, dacoit, dungaree, juggernaut, guru, pundit, khaki, jungle, nirvana, pukka, pyjamas, veranda, maharajah and punch.

https://www.hindustantimes.com/worl...-dictionary/story-nX0u2GMrYxqeQHQ70kEFYI.html
 
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https://www.oxfordlearnersdictionaries.com/us/definition/english/lakh

Many Indian words entered the English lexicon over the centuries and are in use in everyday discourse. ‘Hobson-Jobson’, a glossary published in 1886, included as many as 2000 entries of words and terms from Indian languages during the British ‘raj’.

Some of the commonly used words of Indian etymology are: loot, bungalow, avatar, mantra, chutney, cot, dacoit, dungaree, juggernaut, guru, pundit, khaki, jungle, nirvana, pukka, pyjamas, veranda, maharajah and punch.

https://www.hindustantimes.com/worl...-dictionary/story-nX0u2GMrYxqeQHQ70kEFYI.html

Indian Etymology?
Indian is a langue now?

Either way, those words did originate in India and now are in English.
But Lakh isn't.
Lahk is not an English word.
 
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Either way, those words did originate in India and now are in English.
But Lakh isn't.
Lahk is not an English word.

It's literally in the oxford, cambridge, collins, merriam-webster dictionaries.

If we are to purge modern English of every word that is "not an English word"...there'd be very little left.
 
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It's literally in the oxford, cambridge, collins, merriam-webster dictionaries.

If we are to purge modern English of every word that is "not an English word"...there'd be very little left.
I will give you $5 if you can go to any random white/Chinese guy in Canada and ask him if know whats lakh means and he does.

It is a word only used by South Asians and the rest of the world has no idea what it means.
 
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I will give you $5 if you can go to any random white/Chinese guy in Canada and ask him if know whats lakh means and he does.

It is a word only used by South Asians and the rest of the world has no idea what it means.

I can say that about a lot of words. Not many people know the chinese slang thats made its way into english now...but not really known much outside of chinese people.

Still counts as English as it has entered the dictionary and makes it way up the ladder of usage (more broadly) over time.

Just like the words we take for granted like "jungle" and even rice (speculated to have come from Tamil "arisi" originally and then come to English via Greek and Latin) were once considered far more exotic and unconventional use...and not real English words by whomever (starting out).

The exchange between English and French (esp Norman dialect) especially is quite an interesting one. Almost word for word what you have said "only used by..... and the rest have no idea" was said by quite a few Kings of England and aristocracy back in the day.
 
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What good are these tests? India now belongs in top infected countries.
 
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What good are these tests? India now belongs in top infected countries.

Testing is much important!

Example: Pakistan done the test on Sunday approx 10k and new possitive cases were reported approx 1748.

Now, if you are doing less testing, mean that other people (infected people) are still roaming around you and infecting other people because he is waiting for corona test.

At-least if test more than you can quarantine infected people and stop spreading in community.

It is doing by all countries. Only two solution available as of now:
1. test more as you can.
2. quarantine those infected people.
 
Last edited:
. . .
In India’s Covid-19 testing strategy, a hard push from PM Modi and a dose of reality
In the big picture, India has moved from 13 labs in the first week of February to 123 labs on March 24, the day Prime Minister Narendra Modi ordered a nationwide lockdown, to 609 labs
INDIA Updated: May 25, 2020 22:18 IST
Shishir0001-klw-U20768783376H2-250x250%40HT-Web.jpg

Shishir Gupta
Hindustan Times, New Delhi
htls-d01-s01-modi_7d3f9ed6-9ea7-11ea-95c6-464eb77020f3.jpg

Prime Minister Narendra Modi in the early days of the Covid-19 outbreak, told the country’s top scientists in and outside the Indian Council of Medical Research to expand testing facilities.(Amal KS/HT PHOTO)
told Vogue’s India website, earlier this month.

Realising that India might doom eternal if cheats were applied to testing. The difficult decision of the national lockdown bought them time as it slowed down the spread of the virus and gave the government time to prepare the healthcare infrastructure to trace, track, test, quarantine and treat people.

“We adopted an intelligent testing strategy to remain ahead of the virus. So in the beginning when the infection was entering the country from abroad, we centered our efforts to set up the initial burst of laboratories in cities…. This focus kept on shifting on the basis of our analysis of the likely hotspots of the infection,” a government official explained.

Like before the government started allowing the migrants to go back home, testing facilities preceded them in states such as Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, West Bengal and Odisha.

That was the most difficult part since India doesn’t have a medical college at the district level, and district-level hospitals don’t have the specialised set-up.

_78f06292-9e8f-11ea-95c6-464eb77020f3.png

“This has been quite challenging as the labs outside the medical college systems have meager experience of handling human infectious material,” a health ministry official recalled.

All underserved areas were mapped and Covid-19 molecular diagnostic capacity reached in ‘difficult to reach’ areas such as Arunachal Pradesh, Nagaland, Sikkim, Ladakh, Goa, Andaman & Nicobar Islands.

In the big picture, India moved from 13 labs in the first week of February to 123 labs on March 24, the day Prime Minister Narendra Modi ordered a nationwide lockdown. Days before the lockdown is formally lifted later this month-end, India has 609 testing labs in all states and UTs.

Jugaad, or a frugal innovation, certainly helped when the imported Chinese testing kits didn’t.

TrueNat — a diagnostic machine used for testing drug-resistant tuberculosis — was tested and validated by ICMR to screen people for the Sars-Cov-2 virus (which causes the coronavirus disease) to boost testing capacities.

Since TrueNat platform comes with an inbuilt sample collection in viral lysis buffer, the virus is inactivated and the biosafety requirements are minimal while handling the sample.

There were 367 of these machines in different states for TB diagnosis. These are being used for Covid-19 also . Besides, supplies of 608 additional TrueNAT machines - each has a capacity for 10-12 tests in a day - are also being mobilised to be ready for deployment in June.

With supplies of these machines, it would be possible to have Covid-19 testing capacities in districts with no capacity for carrying out the RT-PCR tests, or reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction test that is considered the gold standard for detecting Sars-Cov-2 virus.
https://www.hindustantimes.com/indi...-of-reality/story-OdltrmDPeTD4BRPUEM0qMP.html

That's impressive. We're still stuck unfortunately with a couple thousand tests per day.
 
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