Indians stuck in Wuhan take flights back home
Army, ITBP set up quarantine camps near Delhi.
New Delhi: India on Friday started evacuating its nationals from Wuhan in China in the wake of the deadly novel coronavirus (n-COV) that has led to over 200 deaths and close to 10,000 confirmed cases of infection.
The first special flight of Air India, a double-decker Boeing 747 jumbo jet with 15 cabin crew and five cockpit crew, left Mumbai on Friday morning and stopped in New Delhi in between to pick up medicines and other essentials before flying to Wuhan. This jumbo is configured with 423 seats. About 366 Indian nationals will be flown back to India by midnight. A second flight will depart for China on Saturday morning.
A team of five doctors from Delhi’s Ram Manohar Lohia hhospital (RML) hospital, one paramedic from Air India with prescribed medicines, masks, overcoats and packed food are travelling to Wuhan in the special flight. A team of engineers, security personnel is also in this special aircraft. The Air India crew will have
minimum contact with the passengers being flown in, hence no service will take place in the plane.
“Whatever food is there will be kept in seat pockets. As there will be no service, there will be no interaction (between cabin crew and passengers),” an Air India spokesman said. He added masks have been arranged for the crew and passengers. “For our crew, we have also arranged complete protective gear,” he said.
In India, special arrangements have been made to keep the incoming passengers in special quarantine zones. The Indian Army and the Indo-Tibetan Border Police (ITBP) have swiftly created facilities in their camps. While the ITBP facility was set up near Chhawla Camp in New Delhi for the quarantine of approximately 600 people arriving from , and to be monitored by a qualified team of doctors 24x7, the Indian Army has created a quarantine facility near Manesar, where 300 people will be monitored for a duration of at least two weeks for signs of coronavirus.
Indian Army officials said screening and quarantine will be a two-step process. “The first one being screening at the airport, followed by the quarantine at Manesar, and if any individual is suspected to be infected, he/she will be shifted to the isolation ward at Base Hospital Delhi Cantonment (BHDC),” said officials. The screening at the airport will be done by a joint team of Armed Forces Medical Services (AFMS) and Airport Health Authority (APHO).
During the screening, they will be classified into three groups — suspect case, close contact case and non-contact case. The suspect case will be individuals with any signs of fever and/or cough and/or respiratory distress will be directly transferred to BHDC. The close contact will be any individual without symptoms, but having visited a seafood/animal market or a health facility or having come into contact with a Chinese person with symptoms in the past 14 days. They will be escorted in an earmarked vehicle directly to the quarantine facility. The non-contact case will be any individual without any symptom or contact. They will also be clubbed along with the close contact category and sent to the quarantine facility.
Indian Army officials said that the facility consists of accommodation barracks for the students, administrative areas and medical facility area. To prevent any mass outbreak, the facility has been divided into sectors, each with a maximum capacity of 50 students.
The population of these sectors will not be allowed to intermingle with each other, or with outsiders, including their family emmebrs. No civilians or serving personnel detailed working inside the facility will be allowed to go outside unless compelled by an extreme emergency.
“Daily medical examination of all students will be done at the medical facility area and all staff, healthcare workers and housekeeping staff must wear their personal protective equipment (PPE) at all times,” officials said.
PPE consists of mask, eye shield, shoe cover, gown and gloves. The rest of the visitors and all students will wear a three-layered mask at all times. After 14 days, persons with no symptoms will be allowed to go home with their detailed documentation sent to the district/state units for further surveillance.
“Those found infected will be shifted to the BHDC’s isolation ward for further medical exams and recovery,” said the officials. The samples for viral confirmation will be sent to NCDC, Delhi, and patients will be discharged only after clinical recovery and two successive negative samples tested for n-COV.