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The Financial Express

25pc children in India may have Covid antibodies, finds study

| Updated: February 10, 2021 17:33:21


Students wearing protective masks attend a class in a government-run school in Hyderabad, India, March 5, 2020. Reuters Students wearing protective masks attend a class in a government-run school in Hyderabad, India, March 5, 2020. Reuters

India survey finds a quarter of children may have COVID antibodies, more than average

More than a quarter of Indian children aged between 10 and 17 may have already contracted COVID-19, according to a government serological survey released on Thursday, higher than the 21.5 per cent of the overall population found to have been infected.

The survey of more than 35,700 people above 10, conducted in the last two months, gave a much lower estimate for the average number of people to have contracted COVID-19 than other research.

Separate tests done on more than 700,000 people across India by diagnostics company Thyrocare Technologies showed 55 per cent of the country's 1.35 billion people may have already been infected, its chief told Reuters last week.

India has officially reported 10.8 million infections, the world's highest after the United States, though its cases have come down sharply since a mid-September peak of nearly 100,000.

The national survey, however, suggests that more than 290 million people may have already been infected in the country.

"The overall picture still shows that more than 75 per cent of the population even now can get infected," said Vinod Kumar Paul, who heads a government group of experts on vaccine strategy, urging people to keep maintaining social distancing and wearing masks.

Among 7,171 randomly-tested healthcare workers, 25.7 per cent were found to have developed antibodies. Capital New Delhi said this week it was approaching herd immunity through natural infection as 56 per cent of its residents had COVID-19 antibodies.

The federal government also said nearly 46 per cent of the country's 9.6 million registered healthcare workers had been given the first vaccine dose since an inoculation campaign began on January 16.

India, which wants to vaccinate 300 million people by August in both government and private hospitals, recently started giving shots to other frontline workers such as police personnel, and would soon start covering the elderly, Health Secretary Rajesh Bhushan told a news conference.

The drive, touted by the government as the world's biggest, has been started with two vaccines: one licensed from Oxford University-AstraZeneca, and another developed at home by Bharat Biotech and the state-run Indian Council of Medical Research.

The next in line for approval are Russia's Sputnik V and Cadila Healthcare's ZyCov-D. Pfizer Inc and partner BioNTech have also sought a similar approval.

India on Thursday reported 12,899 new COVID-19 cases. Deaths rose by 107 to 154,703 - one of the lowest fatality rates anywhere.

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