Kerala model
FRONTLINE|April 10, 2020
Kerala’s social investments in rural health care, universal education, decentralization of powers and resources and women empowerment are standing it in good stead as it leads the fight against the coronavirus.
R. KRISHNAKUMAR
Kerala model

“NOT TESTING ALONE. NOT CONTACT TRACING alone. Not quarantine alone. Not physical distancing alone. Do it all. Find, isolate, test and treat every case, to break the chains of transmission…. Do not let this fire burn.”

If this recent statement of World Health Organisation (WHO) Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus offers the best prescription for dealing with COVID-19 as of now, a State in India that has attracted everyone’s admiration with its quick and effective response to the spread of coronavirus is Kerala.

Right from early February, when three students of Wuhan University in China, then the centre of the outbreak, returned to their homes in the State and were promptly identified, tested and found to be the first known positive cases for coronavirus infection in India, Kerala increased its preparedness, readiness and response to the threat of the pandemic.

KERALA HEALTH MINISTER K.K. Shailaja promotes the use of sanitisers as part of the “Break the Chain” campaign launched by the State government.

It effectively utilised the most valuable resources at its disposal: time, the advance notice it got after the first trickle of people living abroad began to return in the wake of the pandemic threat; the well-known strengths of its refurbished healthcare system; and the out-of-the-blue yet hands-on experience it had gained in the past few years while handling two outbreaks of the deadly Nipah virus (“Managing Nipah”, Frontline, June 22, 2018).

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