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Total 400 UK, Brazil, South Africa COVID Variant Cases in India, 158 Reported in Last 2 Weeks

Total 400 coronavirus patients in India have so far have been found to be affected with three mutant variants first detected in the United Kingdom, South Africa and Brazil.

Published: March 18, 2021 2:49 PM IST

By India.com News Desk | Edited by Rajashree Seal

Swab samples being collected for Covid-19 Rapid antigen testing
Representational Image

New Delhi: As many as 400 people have so far been found infected with three new variants of COVID-19, from the UK, South Africa and Brazil, said the Health Ministry on Thursday amid a sudden spike in coronavirus cases in several parts of the country. Among the 400 cases, 158 cases were reported in the last two weeks. Earlier on Tuesday, New Delhi confirmed its first case of the South African variant of the novel coronavirus.

As on March 4, 2021, a total 242 samples have tested positive for different variants in India, Minister of State for Health Ashwini Choubey said regarding the total number of people who have been infected with the new strains.

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On whether the people who have been infected once could get re-infected by the new virus strain, Choubey said as per World Health Organization (WHO), in the three countries where the pandemic is being driven by the variant mutants of SARS-CoV-2 virus, namely United Kingdom, South Africa and Brazil, the South African and Brazilian variants have the potential to reinfect persons who have been previously infected with SARS-CoV-2.

Recognizing that the mutant variants of SARS-CoV-2 are driving the pandemic in countries of their origin, namely United Kingdom, South Africa and Brazil, Government of India has revised its guidelines for international travel to minimize the risk of importation and further spread of these mutant variants in India, he said.

A genomic consortium of 10 regional laboratories with National Center for Disease Control as the apex laboratory has been established to perform genomic sequencing of the samples from positive travellers and 5 per cent of the positive test samples from the community.

Such international travellers who test positive are kept in special isolation ward, till such time they test negative. The contacts of such cases are also kept under institutional quarantine, till such time they test negative.

“No case of re-infection by mutant variants of SARS-CoV-2 virus has been reported from India so far,” the minister said.

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