5.6 C
London
Thursday, April 18, 2024
HomeCoronavirusHalf of Mumbai's slum residents have had coronavirus: study

Half of Mumbai’s slum residents have had coronavirus: study

Date:

Related stories

India elections: First-time voters want jobs, harmony

India’s general elections, set to begin this Friday (April...

India elections: Key leaders who are in fray in the first phase

The first phase of India’s general elections, scheduled for...

India’s population estimated at 1.44 billion, 24 per cent under 14: UN report

India’s population has reached an estimated 1.44 billion, with...

Middle East crisis: India asks airlines to carry out risk assessment

AMID escalating tensions in the Middle East, India’s civil...

Breast cancer may claim million lives per year by 2040: Lancet

BREAST CANCER is now the world’s most common carcinogenic...

Over half the people living in the slums of Mumbai have had the coronavirus, according to a city-commissioned study released Tuesday that raises fresh doubts about India’s official case numbers.

India is already the third worst-hit country after the US and Brazil, with nearly 1.5 million cases though experts have previously said the lack of testing could mean the true tally is much higher.

Blood tests on 6,936 randomly selected people conducted by Mumbai’s city authorities found that 57 percent of slum-dwellers and 16 percent of non-slum residents had virus antibodies.

Mumbai, where about 40 percent of the population lives in slums, has reported just over 110,000 infections and more than 6,000 deaths so far.

The western city of 20 million people is home to India’s largest slum Dharavi, where an estimated one million people live.

But deaths in the sprawling slum have not exploded, with local officials saying their aggressive efforts to stem the spread of the virus has been effective.

The survey results suggested asymptomatic infections were “likely to be a high proportion of all infections” and also indicated the virus death rate was likely to be “very low”, the study said.

The Mumbai survey came a week after an antibody study commissioned by the government suggested that almost a quarter of people in the capital New Delhi, home to 20 million people, have had the virus.

Subscribe

- Never miss a story with notifications

- Gain full access to our premium content

- Browse free from up to 5 devices at once

Latest stories