• Sunday, May 19, 2024

Coronavirus

Covid-19 second wave in India may peak mid-April, say experts

Maharashtra and Delhi being the worst hit in the second wave of the Covid-19 pandemic. (Photo by Yawar Nazir/Getty Images)

By: Sattwik Biswal

SCIENTISTS have predicted using a mathematical model that the ongoing second-wave of Covid-19 pandemic across the country could peak by mid-April, following which the infections may see a steep decline by the end of May.

During the first wave of infections across India, the mathematical approach, named SUTRA, predicted that the initial surge of infections in August would peak by September and lower in February 2021.

Scientists, including Manindra Agrawal from Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) Kanpur, applied the model to predict the trajectory of the current surge in infections and found that the number of daily new infections is likely to peak in mid-April for this ongoing pandemic wave.

“For the last several days, we have found that there is a reasonable chance that the cases in India could peak sometime between 15-20 April. It is a sharp slope, but on the way down, it would likely be equally sharp, coming down very fast and by end of May may see a dramatic reduction,” Agrawal told PTI.

“There is some uncertainty in predicting the peak value of daily new infections because of the sharp rise. Currently, it is coming to 1 lakh infections per day, but this can go up or down. But the timing remains the same between April 15-20,” he added.

Scientists predict that in the current wave, the first state to peak could be Punjab in a few days, followed by Maharashtra.

However, the IIT Kanpur professor added that the model’s prediction of the new peak is sensitive to the daily new infections data.

“Even a little bit of change each day causes the peak numbers to change by several thousand numbers. But the location of the peak has remained on mid-April,” he added.

Independent calculations made by scientists, including Gautam Menon from Ashoka University in Haryana, have also predicted that the peak of the ongoing wave of infections could be between mid-April and mid-May.

However, Menon cautioned that such projections of Covid-19 cases should really be trusted only in the short term.

“Any excessively precise prediction, of a peak within just a five-day window, would ignore the many uncertainties associated with the inputs to any such calculation,” Menon, who was not involved in the SUTRA modelling, told PTI.

Agrawal noted that the model uses three main parameters to predict the course of the pandemic

On Friday, India recorded 81,466 new infections in a span of 24 hours – the highest single-day rise in cases since October 2, 2020 – taking the total Covid-19 cases to 1,23,03,131, according to the Union Health Ministry data.

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