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Shitskin Desi fear for loved ones as Covid ravages India

Cottonmouth

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'Part of my soul is dying every day': S'pore residents fear for loved ones as Covid-19 ravages India
India's Covid-19 numbers hit another record on April 26 for the fifth day in a row.
India's Covid-19 numbers hit another record on April 26 for the fifth day in a row.PHOTO: AFP
malavika_menon.png

Malavika Menon

  • PUBLISHED
    6 HOURS AGO


SINGAPORE - The first thing senior fintech consultant Shubadha Mishra does when she wakes up in her flat in Kembangan nowadays is to reach for her phone to check on the condition of her fiance, Mr Zakwan Khan, 28.
He is diabetic and lives in a flat in Hyderabad in India's Telangana state. His flatmate, a friend, is currently battling Covid-19 but is recovering at home as there are no hospital beds available in the city.
Ms Mishra, 28, is one of hundreds of Singapore residents who have spent the past few weeks fearing for their loved ones in India as a new and devastating Covid-19 wave sweeps across the subcontinent.
She said: "My fiance is in the high-risk category, but since all his family members have the virus, he could not go to them, and his friend has no one else to care for him either.
She added: "Every day, wondering if he has got the infection from his flatmate or if his own oxygen level is going to dip all of a sudden - which may point to an ongoing Covid-19 infection - is an extremely depressing thought. I am relieved to be safe in Singapore but I regret not being able to help my friends and family."
India's Covid-19 numbers hit another record on Monday (April 26) for the fifth day in a row as countries pledged to send urgent medical aid. Medical equipment, including much-needed oxygen-related supplies, were sent from Singapore to India on Sunday.



India, which has a population of 1.3 billion, has recorded 17.31 million Covid-19 infections and 195,123 deaths. Health experts say the death toll is probably far higher.
Mrs Latha Pradeep, 47, a teacher at the Global Indian International School, is worried about her eldest daughter and her parents, who live in Kozhikode, a town in the southern state of Kerala.
Mrs Latha's 23-year-old daughter is a third-year medical student at the Calicut Medical College, which has a Covid-19 isolation ward. While her daughter has received both doses of the Covid-19 vaccine as a front-line worker, Mrs Latha said she is worried that her daughter might unwittingly transmit the virus to her parents, who have received only the first dose.
"Every moment we spend here when we are not distracted by work, we are thinking about loved ones back home and the country as a whole," Mrs Latha said.
Ms Vaishnavi Gupta, 21, a final-year student at the Singapore Management University, was completing her final examinations last week when she found out that her 77-year-old grandmother in Kolkata, in West Bengal state, had tested positive for the virus.
"I really wanted to be there for her and the stress got in the way of my exams to an extent. Due to the bed shortage in hospitals, she was hospitalised later than she should have been, which really affected her health," Ms Gupta said.
Mr Pulak Rishi, 34, and Ms Saumya Bhargava, 33, who are now Singapore citizens, said they felt helpless when both their parents contracted the virus in Lucknow, the capital of Uttar Pradesh, India's most populous state.
Mr Rishi, a chief software architect, said: "Our initial attempts to source oxygen exposed us to the ground reality of resource shortage, overworked doctors and supply chain bottlenecks. We lived with the uncertainty of wondering what the doctor would say, if we would get medicine the next day or if home care would work."
MORE ON THIS TOPIC
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While their parents are currently recovering at home, the couple are on standby for the possibility that their loved ones could still be reinfected by another variant of the coronavirus.
Ms Bhargava, a senior category manager in the food and beverage sector, said the crisis has left her drained.
"While managing things remotely, we encountered horror stories about families, death and suffering, creating more fear. I feel like a part of my soul is dying every day," she said. "Right now, we have to keep going because there is no other option, but once things become better, I will probably start going to therapy."
 
Send them back to India so they can help their beloved motherland handle the pandemic. :thumbsup:
 
Of course, someone like her would be the one writing the article. :rolleyes:

malavika_menon.png


https://sg.linkedin.com/in/malavika-menon

Malavika Menon
Current Student at Singapore Management University
Singapore Press Holdings Ltd
Singapore Management University

About
As a journalism scholar, my first and foremost motivation is to work for and as a part of society's fourth estate - The Press. With a keen interest in current affairs and diplomacy, as well strong public speaking skills, I aspire to take on new endeavors that will challenge and broaden my world view. Having lived in both developing and developed societies, as well as taken part in international diplomacy conferences, I aim to employ the interpersonal and intercultural skills that I have learnt to increase awareness and provide informed discourse on contemporary social issues.

Experience
News Reporter
Singapore Press Holdings Ltd
May 2016 - Jul 2016 3 months

Legal Intern
Harry Elias Partnership LLP
Oct 2014 - Nov 2014 2 months


Education
Singapore Management University
Bachelor of Social Sciences Political Science, Public Policy and Public Management
2015 - 2019
Activities and Societies: United Nations Students Association - SMU SMU Indian Cultural Society - President The Blue and Gold (SMU Editorial) - Writer

Christ Junior College
12th Grade degree Humanities and Arts stream
2012 - 2014
Activities and Societies: Social Science Association (Secretary) Cultural Association

------

https://www.christjuniorcollege.in/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christ_Junior_College
Christ Junior College (CJC) is a pre-university college located in Bangalore, Karnataka, India.
 
Of course, someone like her would be the one writing the article. :rolleyes:

malavika_menon.png


https://sg.linkedin.com/in/malavika-menon

Malavika Menon
Current Student at Singapore Management University
Singapore Press Holdings Ltd
Singapore Management University

About
As a journalism scholar, my first and foremost motivation is to work for and as a part of society's fourth estate - The Press. With a keen interest in current affairs and diplomacy, as well strong public speaking skills, I aspire to take on new endeavors that will challenge and broaden my world view. Having lived in both developing and developed societies, as well as taken part in international diplomacy conferences, I aim to employ the interpersonal and intercultural skills that I have learnt to increase awareness and provide informed discourse on contemporary social issues.

Experience
News Reporter
Singapore Press Holdings Ltd
May 2016 - Jul 2016 3 months

Legal Intern
Harry Elias Partnership LLP
Oct 2014 - Nov 2014 2 months


Education
Singapore Management University
Bachelor of Social Sciences Political Science, Public Policy and Public Management
2015 - 2019
Activities and Societies: United Nations Students Association - SMU SMU Indian Cultural Society - President The Blue and Gold (SMU Editorial) - Writer

Christ Junior College
12th Grade degree Humanities and Arts stream
2012 - 2014
Activities and Societies: Social Science Association (Secretary) Cultural Association

------

https://www.christjuniorcollege.in/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christ_Junior_College
Christ Junior College (CJC) is a pre-university college located in Bangalore, Karnataka, India.

Smelly indian cunt featuring another indian cunt.
These 2 desi can go fuck each other with a knife.
 
Give them half a chance all the "loved ones" will be in Singapore either on dependency visas or to "visit family".....WTF.
 
Give them half a chance all the "loved ones" will be in Singapore either on dependency visas or to "visit family".....WTF.

Medical tourists or SHN staycationers. :sneaky:
 
The avalanche of bad news about India is nothing but media hype.

I've gone through all the various metrics and none of them indicate that India is worse any worse off compared with the majority of other countries.

Even when it comes to case fatality rate (CFR) India is way, way lower than most other countries as can be seen from the charts at ourworldindata.org
The media will do just about anything to attract viewership nowadays. The truth can take a back seat.

Here's a comparison with other countries which were previously being touted as going through a Covid apocalypse. You can see for yourselves that India is nowhere near as bad as what other countries have been through.


Screen Shot 2021-04-27 at 5.37.22 PM.png
 
In a few days the numbers will start to fall and the media will then go off in search of some other country to malign and denigrate.
 
The avalanche of bad news about India is nothing but media hype.

I've gone through all the various metrics and none of them indicate that India is worse any worse off compared with the majority of other countries.

Even when it comes to case fatality rate (CFR) India is way, way lower than most other countries as can be seen from the charts at ourworldindata.org
The media will do just about anything to attract viewership nowadays. The truth can take a back seat.

Here's a comparison with other countries which were previously being touted as going through a Covid apocalypse. You can see for yourselves that India is nowhere near as bad as what other countries have been through.


View attachment 109159
That chart does not include all those who died outside hospitals, or those who died in hospital driveways unable to get a bed. x10 to get conservative estimate of death rate.
 
That chart does not include all those who died outside hospitals, or those who died in hospital driveways unable to get a bed. x10 to get conservative estimate of death rate.

Same thing happened in Brazil and South Africa so let's multiply both those by 10x too which still means India is no big deal.

For Mexico multiply by 5x.
 
Brazil poses global health threat as its hospitals buckle under COVID-19, experts warn
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Scientists predict Brazil could surpass U.S. death toll by July despite smaller population

steven-d-souza.jpg

Steven D'Souza · CBC News · Posted: Apr 09, 2021 4:00 AM ET | Last Updated: April 15

health-coronavirus-global-casualties.JPG

Relatives of Luiz Alves, 63, who died from COVID-19, react at his funeral in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, on March 10, 2021. This week, Brazil set a new daily record with more than 4,000 deaths. (Pilar Olivares/Reuters)
Inside a COVID-19 unit in the southern Brazilian city of Porto Alegre, Dr. Tarsila Vieceli said she is seeing firsthand the collapse of the country's health-care system under the weight of the coronavirus pandemic.

Heart attack and car accident victims, she said, aren't guaranteed an ICU bed, and surgeries are being cancelled. There's a waiting list for ICU beds that are filled with COVID-19 patients who, unlike early in the pandemic, are younger and have no underlying medical conditions.

"In one shift I did in February in the ICU, out of 10 patients I was taking care of, all of them were on mechanical ventilation — six of those patients were less than 35 years of age," Vieceli said in an interview with CBC News on Skype during a break in her shift.

This week, Brazil set a new one-day record for COVID-19 deaths, with the health ministry reporting 4,195 dead on Tuesday. Scientists are warning the country could surpass the record wave of deaths set in January in the U.S.


As of Thursday, Brazil had 340,776 deaths from COVID-19, according to a count maintained by Johns Hopkins University. Researchers warn that by July, Brazil's rapid rise in deaths could see it surpass the United States in total deaths despite having two-thirds the population.
 
Brazil poses global health threat as its hospitals buckle under COVID-19, experts warn
Social Sharing
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Email
  • Reddit
  • LinkedIn
Scientists predict Brazil could surpass U.S. death toll by July despite smaller population

steven-d-souza.jpg

Steven D'Souza · CBC News · Posted: Apr 09, 2021 4:00 AM ET | Last Updated: April 15

health-coronavirus-global-casualties.JPG

Relatives of Luiz Alves, 63, who died from COVID-19, react at his funeral in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, on March 10, 2021. This week, Brazil set a new daily record with more than 4,000 deaths. (Pilar Olivares/Reuters)
Inside a COVID-19 unit in the southern Brazilian city of Porto Alegre, Dr. Tarsila Vieceli said she is seeing firsthand the collapse of the country's health-care system under the weight of the coronavirus pandemic.

Heart attack and car accident victims, she said, aren't guaranteed an ICU bed, and surgeries are being cancelled. There's a waiting list for ICU beds that are filled with COVID-19 patients who, unlike early in the pandemic, are younger and have no underlying medical conditions.

"In one shift I did in February in the ICU, out of 10 patients I was taking care of, all of them were on mechanical ventilation — six of those patients were less than 35 years of age," Vieceli said in an interview with CBC News on Skype during a break in her shift.

This week, Brazil set a new one-day record for COVID-19 deaths, with the health ministry reporting 4,195 dead on Tuesday. Scientists are warning the country could surpass the record wave of deaths set in January in the U.S.


As of Thursday, Brazil had 340,776 deaths from COVID-19, according to a count maintained by Johns Hopkins University. Researchers warn that by July, Brazil's rapid rise in deaths could see it surpass the United States in total deaths despite having two-thirds the population.

Brazilians get a decent coffin.
Indians are burned like trash.
 
The avalanche of bad news about India is nothing but media hype.

I've gone through all the various metrics and none of them indicate that India is worse any worse off compared with the majority of other countries.

Even when it comes to case fatality rate (CFR) India is way, way lower than most other countries as can be seen from the charts at ourworldindata.org
The media will do just about anything to attract viewership nowadays. The truth can take a back seat.

Here's a comparison with other countries which were previously being touted as going through a Covid apocalypse. You can see for yourselves that India is nowhere near as bad as what other countries have been through.


View attachment 109159

Wrong. Again. Call it 0 for 111 tries.

EztcgirXIAAqmWi.jpg
 
In a few days the numbers will start to fall and the media will then go off in search of some other country to malign and denigrate.

Wrong. Again. Call it 0 for 112 tries.

https://www.downtoearth.org.in/news...d India's daily death,6,352 deaths (April 27).

COVID-19: Expect a million deaths in India by August 1
India’s COVID-19 cases are 20 times more than officially declared



NEXT NEWS ❯

By DTE Staff
Published: Tuesday 27 April 2021



The death toll from the novel coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic in India will be 959,561 by August 1, 2021, according to latest projection by the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME). With an estimated global toll of 5,050,464, India would account for nearly a fifth of the total deaths.
IHME is a global health research center at the University of Washington. Its projections on COVID-19 are considered to be based on robust models.
The pandemic already killed 3,104,743 (as of April 26), according to data from the world Health Organization; India accounted for 195,123 of them.
IHME projected India’s daily death toll at 13,050 by May 15 — more than double the current 6,352 deaths (April 27).
There were many more COVID-19 cases in India than Government of India has declared, IHME professor Christopher JL Murray, said in a recorded analysis:
The exponential rise in cases and deaths continues in India, and our analysis of seroprevalence surveys, is telling us what the infection detection rate is below 5 per cent — maybe even around 3-4 per cent. This means that the number of cases that are being detected needs to be multiplied by 20 or more to get the number of infections that are occurring in India. The number of infections right now is extraordinarily large. There’s more infections happening in India than what occurred globally two weeks ago.
That way, India would already have had 6 million infections.
“Our latest projections show that the number of infections driven by the surge in India (and perhaps also driven by the surges in Bangladesh and Pakistan) will be reaching 15 million a day globally,” he said.
Murray argues that infection in India is so high that “COVID-19 may run out of people to infect pretty soon”. This means after mid-May transmission in India would start declining.
That is that proverbial silver lining, but the novel coronavirus has not been confirmed yet to take a chartered path.

स्वास्थ्य से जुड़ी सभी खबरें हिंदी में पढ़ें।
coronavirus coronavirus pandemic Health India
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