Nagpur: Ten girls and one boy chasing the first year MBBS at Datta Meghe Medical College in Wanadongri was tested positively on Monday.
All 150 MBBS students were first vaccinated with both doses in February and March under the Category of Health Workers (HCW) by College, Dean Dr.
Dilip Gode told TII.
This is the first MBBS batch on campus.
Some infected students complained about fever feelings while others were fully asymptomatic.
Dr.
Gode said everything was fine and did not have the main health problem due to vaccination.
“Their SPO2 level is maintained at 98%,” he said.
Dr.
Gode told that infected students had been accepted in the Special Ward Hospital and Shalinitai Meghe (SMHRC) research, where the dedicated Covid hospital was closed after the second wave receded in recent months.
Universities have told parents parents and their counseling is being carried out.
More than 100 students including those infected live in campus hostels.
The college will conduct RT-PCR tests for all of them on Wednesday.
The remaining 50 belongs to the city and is suggested isolation and home testing.
The rest of the hostile has been quarantined in the dorm room and the doctor checks each of them, Dean said.
College also has a Bachelor of 50 Days Bams.
One of them has also been tested positively, said Dr.
Gode.
Dean said the contact search has begun but it will be difficult to say where students are infected.
“Two girls fever.
We assume it can be bleeding but they are also tested for covid and found positive.
The close contact they are too positive.
We have taken their history and did not find anyone traveling to the city in the past week.
They have classes up 5.30 and must return at 9:30 to the hostel.
When the exam will appear, they tell us that they are only at the hostel, “Dean said.
The source said one source of infection that might order food from outside and a birthday celebration at the hostel.
Dean said this was the first time every student was tested positive after reopening the physical class in June.
These numbers will be reported in Tuesday’s data by the Nagpur Civil Surgeon Office.
Sudden spikes tend to increase everyday cases to around 20 at the end of the day, said district officials.
Up to a few days, the district has reported a one-digit case, mostly one or two.
In fact, rural parts including Hingna Tehsil where universities located have not reported one case for 12 days at the end of August.
The latest spike in the case came a day after the Guardian Minister Nitin Raut said the district would impose restrictions on companies that were not essential in the third wave view projected.