- Industry
- 2 min read
Omicron surges 5x to 21; 1 new case in Delhi, 9 in Rajasthan, 7 in Maharashtra
India’s tally of confirmed Covid-19 cases linked to the newly discovered Omicron variant shot up five times overnight as nine people in Rajasthan, including a four-member NRI family from South Africa, seven in Maharashtra’s Pune and one in Delhi tested positive for that strain of the virus. The total count currently stands at 21.
As of Saturday, the tally was four, after Maharashtra and Gujarat reported a case each to add to the two detected first in Karnataka.
Delhi’s first Covid patient found to have been infected with the Omicron variant is a 33-year-old man who returned from Tanzania recently. Sources said the fully vaccinated patient is being treated at Lok Nayak Hospital.
Of the nine cases confirmed in Jaipur, health officials are worried about a spurt in infections within a cluster of people linked to the four-member family from South Africa. Chief medical health officer (Jaipur-I) Dr Narrottam Sharma said the family attended a family wedding in the city on November 28 that was attended by around 100 guests. The groom is from Sikar and bride from Karkardooma in Delhi. “We have informed the Delhi health department about it.” A relative of the family was the first to test positive for Covid, followed by four other members of the household.
Omicron live updates
In the Pune Metropolitan Region, a 44-year-old woman of Indian origin from Nigeria and her two daughters – aged 12 and 17 – tested positive after travelling to Pimpri Chinchwad from the African country via Mumbai on November 24. Three of their contacts, including the woman’s brother and his two kids, and a 47-year-old man who had travelled to Pune from Finland via Mumbai on November 26 are among the seven confirmed Omicron cases, state health officials said on Sunday.
Four immediate family members of the Finland-returned man, who is asymptomatic and in home isolation, have since tested negative. All the adults who have tested positive are vaccinated. Sanjay Patil, chairman of the Indian Medical Association’s Hospital Board of India in Pune, said the fact that none of them had developed severe symptoms was “very reassuring”.
COMMENTS
All Comments
By commenting, you agree to the Prohibited Content Policy
PostBy commenting, you agree to the Prohibited Content Policy
PostFind this Comment Offensive?
Choose your reason below and click on the submit button. This will alert our moderators to take actions