Goa: The second wave plate, has not touched the first low, say experts – News2IN
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Goa: The second wave plate, has not touched the first low, say experts

Panaji: Goa gets a breath of five months when the first wave of Pandemic Safat Pandemi-19 post-September 2020.
The daily case count remained under 100 days in January and dropped to less than 50 in February to mid.
However, when contrasts with the second more fatal wave, however, the Covid-19 graph of the country has not touched the low he saw during the first wave of pandemic.
This despite the fact that Caseload dropped in June-July after the spread of the virus that quickly brought in a disaster in May.
The average daily case is currently floating around 85 since early August, a little swimming from 100-odd fresh infections is recorded every day in July.
But even though the graphically seems to have a plateau, it is not clear whether it will go down further or move up.
Experts say that everyday cases have not dropped under 50 as a second Covid-19 wave triggered by delta tensions that are deadly and contagious.
“Viruses that are proven during the first wave do not appear as seen in the second wave.
Even though cases are now reduced, they are not as low as what we see during the first phase of the pandemic,” said the State Epidemiology of Dr.
Utkarsh Betodkar to Tii.
Consultant pathologist Dr.
Eugene d’Souza said the Delta variant also had an immune runaway, which led to reinfection and infection in vaccinated individuals.
It will be difficult to predict what a pandemic will take, said Betodkar while adding that it is possible that the existing pattern will continue.
“The cases may not touch zero and we may remain in the highlands for a while,” he said.
The prediction that the third wave might be clear in August-September was based on the trend that had been observed in the H1N1 nail during September, said Betodkar.
D’Souza said that because most infections in the community were caused by a variant of concern (VOC), the appropriate behavior of Covid could not be passed and vaccinated must continue until the target population was discussed.

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