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CCFR declined with time in Kmr, reveals research

CCFR declined with time in Kmr, reveals research
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SRINAGAR: A research study titled ‘Case Fatality Rate, Mortality Trends during Pandemic in Kashmir’ has revealed that the Covid Case Fatality Rate in Kashmir declined with time despite new variants appearing and spreading rapidly.

The research was published in ‘Asian Journal of Medical Sciences’ (AJMS) and was conducted by Incharge Divisional Covid Control Room Kashmir (DCCRK) Tahir Ahmad Magray, Dr Umar Nazir, Dr Rouf Hussain Rather, Dr Feroz Ahmad Wani all Medical Officers who worked at DCCRK to give an overview of the entire situation as a result of Covid-19 pandemic.

The researchers have merited a case study to evaluate and examine how the worst nightmare in contemporary epoch acted and what happened during successive waves and multiple trends that were felt by people here in a geographically isolated region of Kashmir division.

As Divisional Covid Control Room, Kashmir was established and made functional with resourceful persons and experts for instant dissemination of relevant information to administration for containment measures, the team stationed there also dedicated their energy and time to collected data and monitor the overall situation and came up with a research study.

“What happened during the entire span of Pandemic, Tahir Ahmad Magray, Dr Umar Nazir, Dr Rouf Hussain Rather and Dr Feroz Ahmad Wani conducted a research study on Demographic and Mortality Trends across three COVID-19 waves in Kashmir Division, which was published by Asian Journal of Medical Sciences (AJMS),” the spokesman said.

The study has revealed that the Case Fatality Rate declined with time despite new variants appearing which spread at a very fast rate and mortality remained higher in elderly and in males in all the three waves.

The study published by AJMS reveals that during the three waves, Kashmir Division witnessed 274307 COVID-19 cases and 2334 deaths. The trend of COVID-19 case incidence in Kashmir division followed a pattern similar to India with two exceptions.

“First, the peak of all the waves in our division occurred approximately 12- 14 days later than the country. Second, there was relatively less burden of cases during the first wave corresponding to Kashmir’s regional lockdown,” it states, adding that the second wave had exponential growth of cases and the world’s largest peak and absolute number of cases.

The percentage of cases was higher (47% of the total cases) during the second wave of COVID-19 pandemic which can be attributed to the fact that the dominant mutant strain (delta) was more transmissible, more virulent and was escaping the immune system of our body.

“Simultaneously the lockdown measures were seen less effective due to various socio-economic constraints among the masses which made them to have complacency in adapting COVID appropriate behavior during the second wave,” researchers argue.

Lately, during the third wave the percentage of cases again came down (26.2%) despite the highly transmissible mutant variant of the virus because the population was less susceptible this time as most of the people had been infected during the first two waves of the pandemic.

The researchers claim that an overall CFR of 0.85% was observed in our population with a maximum case fatality of 1.67% in the first wave followed by 0.79% in the second wave and only 0.13% in the third wave.

“We also found that the mortality from this COVID-19 pandemic was seen highest 64% (1493) in the age group 60 years and above, followed by 30.6% (715) in the  age group of 41-60 years, 4.8% (113) in the age group of 21-40 years and only 0.6% (13) occurred in the age group of 0-20 years,” researchers say.

The entire paper can be accessed for study through online on this link   https://www.nepjol.info/index.php/AJMS/issue/view/2777 published on October 01, 2022.

Earlier, same group of experts published a paper on “Comparison of rapid antigen testing and RT-PCR in the diagnosis of COVID-19 in Kashmir division, which was published by International Journal of Advances in Medicine which can be accessed via https://www.ijmedicine.com/index.php/ijam/article/view/3406.


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