Bhubaneswar: Western District Nuabada and Boudh on Sundays did not report a single Covid infection even when the country added 1,833 new cases from 71,077 samples tested in the last 24 hours.
Nuabada’s neighbor, Balalangir, reported only two cases.
Nuabada has tested nearly 1,000 samples every day.
Of 1,000, around 750 was made to undergo a quick antigen test.
Balangir District Administration has tested nearly 2,000 samples every day, while Boudh has filtered around 800 samples.
In the case of active cases, Nuabada was in second place with 41, while Deogarh with 32 had such a number of patients on Sunday.
Nuabada, who is close to Chhattisgarh, reported the Nile case at least four times in July despite testing around 1,000 samples every day.
When the second wave has gone to the house, this district has become the main cause of concern for the state government to almost the last week possible because the number of extraordinarily high infections reported from here.
“We are alert after a mild surge in the Mahasumand section of Chhattisgarh.
In addition to maintaining regular testing, enforcement activities also occur because there are very few restrictions that apply here,” said the district collector (Nuabada) Swadha Dev Singh.
According to the Ministry of Health’s report, if the second wave starts from February 18, it only takes three months to Nuabada to bend the curve compared to coastal districts with the same population.
The coastal district of Jagatsinghpur, Jajpur, Kendrapada, Nayagarh, Bhadrak and Cuttack saw waves in the case in April.
But the falling step in the number of Covid daily in the districts is very slow.
A similar trend has been noted in the North District of Ballasore and Mayurbhanj.
While the number of cumulative infections of the state is located nearly 10 lakh, the capital has added around 350 cases every day, on average, in July.
The active case, which has fallen to 1.192, is set to violate a 2,000 mark.
The capital also reported 15 Covid deaths with the government on Sunday confirmed 67 more deaths.