ALSO READ| Delhi & Maharashtra Among 5 States To Get 1st Batch Of Covid-19 Drug 'Covifor', Know Cost And Availability Here
Here are some of the steps being taken to control the infection in Delhi
Serological survey
On June 21 in a high-level meeting, the Delhi and Central governments decided to conduct a serosurvey to assess the Covid 19 situation in the city. In a serosurvey, blood samples of people are collected to test for the presence of antibodies specific to a pathogen. In this case, it is meant to test for IgG antibodies against SARS-CoV-2 that normally appear 14 days after the infection and continue to be present in the blood serum for months. From June 27, Saturday the survey will begin. According to the Home Ministry, it will cover entire Delhi and around 20,000 people will be tested. This survey is a surveillance measure to understand how the infection is evolving in a particular area.
Door To door screening
The Delhi Government on June 24 announced that every house will be screened by July 6. According to a report by PTI teams of accredited social health activists (ASHA) and auxiliary nurse midwives(ANM) started the government project from June 25. The report says that Apart from basic details like name, age, address and contact, the teams are feeding the ''SS Corona'' app with information such as every individual''s travel history, whether or not they use the Aarogya Setu app, and if they have symptoms of flu.
Drive Through testing centres
A report by ANI says that private labs in the city have also ramped up their testing facilities and are using ‘drive-through’ sample collection centres. The report says a 20-minute time slot is given to each vehicle but the tests itself take about 6-7 minutes. Private labs such as Dr Dangs lab have set up three such facilities across the city
ALSO READ| Atma Nirbhar UP Rozgar Abhiyan: 1.25 Cr Jobs- A New Record; Know The key Features Of Yogi's Scheme
Oximetre for patients in Home isolation
TiheDelhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal also announced that Covid 19 patients in Home isolation will be provided with pulse oximeters so that they keep track of their oxygen levels. The device determines the oxygen saturation level in your body which is an indication of the percentage of haemoglobin carrying oxygen in the body. The minister said that once the patient has recovered the device can be returned to the government.