Lessons for SA: How to beat Covid-19 in an overcrowded slum – chase the virus
From the start of the Covid-19 pandemic, it has been clear that it has been relatively easy for the better-off to self-isolate and keep to social distancing rules and impossible for people who live in areas where there are high levels of poverty. In May, GG Alcock, an expert on South Africa's informal economy, underscored that residents in high density townships were not able to quarantine themselves, which made a mockery of the country's strict lockdown rules. In India, authorities responsible for Asia's most crowded slum have come up with a successful strategy to beat Covid-19. Their aggressive "chase the virus" approach has converted India's Dharavi from a coronavirus hotspot to an example for healthcare policymakers in other developing nations to consider emulating. – Jackie Cameron
How Asia's densest slum chased the virus has lessons for others
By Dhwani Pandya
(Bloomberg) – India's Dharavi, the continent's most crowded slum, has gone from coronavirus hotspot to potential success story, offering a model for developing nations struggling to contain the pandemic.
Authorities have knocked on 47,500 doors since April to measure temperatures and oxygen levels, screened almost 700,000 people in the slum cluster, and set up fever clinics, official data show. Recognizing the need to isolate residents in the tenement where as many as eighty share a toilet, those with symptoms were shifted to nearby schools and sports clubs converted into quarantine centers.
Fresh daily infections are now down to a third compared with early May, half the sick are recovering, and the number of deaths plummeted this month.
The numbers are in stark contrast to the rest of India, whose daily tally of new infected cases has quadrupled since early May. Located near Mumbai's financial district, Dharavi's dogged approach to "chase the virus" borrows ideas from clusters such as those in China's Wuhan or South Korea, and could be a template for emerging markets across the world, from the favelas of Brazil to shanty towns in South Africa.
"It was next to impossible to follow social distancing," said Kiran Dighavkar, assistant commissioner at Mumbai's municipality, who is in charge of leading the fight in Dharavi. "The only option then was to chase the virus rather than wait for the cases to come. To work proactively, rather than reactively."