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Communist-led Kerala a model for the world in beating Covid-19

COMMUNIST-LED Kerala in southern India has been hailed as a model for beating the coronavirus, winning praise for “flattening the curve” despite a lack of support from the country’s central government.

It attributes its success to responding quickly, monitoring the development of Covid-19 as early as January when a student returned to the region from China’s Wuhan province where the outbreak began.

Measures including contact tracing and testing were implemented swiftly with those showing symptoms isolated in hospital or being placed in home quarantine.

Kerala’s communist-led government imposed its own lockdown on the state’s 34 million population the day before the nationwide one came into effect haphazardly last month, with schools and non-essential workplaces closed and all public gatherings banned.

The state ensured that supplies, including midday meals for schoolchildren, were delivered to people’s homes and established mental health hotlines for those struggling to cope with the strictly imposed measures.

Kerala was able to draw on its previous experiences of dealing with a pandemic, having protocols in place after the 2018 outbreak of Nipah, a disease with no vaccine or known effective treatment.

Its efforts have been made easier by the primary health care system, with community and neighbourhood outreach teams helping limit spread of Covid-19.

“We have doctors, nurses and paramedics in every village,” KN Harilal, a member of the Kerala State Planning Board said. “So, we have a strong army of healthcare workers to fight epidemics.”

Kerala invests more money in health than anywhere else in India and has one of the highest literacy rates in the country, making it easier to disseminate public information and updates about coronavirus.

Just three people of the Kerala’s 400 reported cases of Covid-19 have died, less than 1 per cent.

India as a whole has recorded nearly 22,000 cases of coronavirus with 686 deaths.

One of the reasons Kerala is bucking the trend by “flattening the curve” when the rest of the country is experiencing a peak in cases, is the strong grassroots democracy in Kerala.

The communist administration has devolved power right down to village councils, which has enabled the community outreach programmes to operate effectively and the daily reporting of new information from Kerala’s government to reach its citizens.

As cases are starting to slow down, Kerala’s government is considering relaxing some of its lockdown measures, although there are concerns the state may be hit by a “second-wave” of infections imported from elsewhere in India.

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