IT WAS IN NOVEMBER 2022 THAT THE LAST COVID WARD was dismantled in the national capital. The largest of Delhi's 11 pandemic wards, the space in LNJP Hospital used to be overrun with anxious families, breathless patients and frantic doctors. Today, it has once again reverted to being a teaching classroom. The beds and equipment are gone, but the lessons of the pandemic remain. Doctors and scientists in the country remain on alert for the next major disease outbreak. The World Health Organization (WHO) calls it 'Disease X', expects it to be zoonotic (transmitted naturally from vertebrate animals to humans, or the reverse), and most likely an RNA virus. Its announcement has spurred research and predictions on when the next pandemic will hit the world.
Tata Institute for Genetics and Society (TIGS) director Rakesh Mishra, also the former director of the CSIR-Centre for Cellular and Molecular Biology (CCMB), who is currently involved in surveying the country for novel viruses, says, "Covid isn't the only virus that's a worry. We have thousands of individual viruses of concern and millions that have not been discovered yet. We should not be looking at the next virus to emerge from another country either.
We have plenty of high-risk areas in India too where a novel virus can make the jump from an animal to a human host. The more human settlements start to spread into forested areas, the more we can expect an increase in likelihood of a new virus emerging in human beings." Kate Bingham, the former chair of the UK's vaccine taskforce, predicts that the next pandemic could be 20 times deadlier than Covid, claiming up to 50 million human lives. "If you look at the pattern of recent zoonotic viruses, from Nipah to Covid, they have all been contagious and all been harmful to human health. Even if the next virus is not a global pandemic, it can still do a lot of damage on a local scale. We need to be on our guard," adds Mishra.
Denne historien er fra December 18, 2023-utgaven av India Today.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent ? Logg på
Denne historien er fra December 18, 2023-utgaven av India Today.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
He gave the beat to the world
He would pick up the rhythms of each experience of mobility and weave them into his taals. Thus it was that he reflected joy and laughter in rhythmic cycles...such was the magic of Zakir's fingersText and photographs by Raghu Rai
KERALA TOURISM CAMPAIGN, 1989 - TICKETS TO PARADISE
All it took was a catchy tagline-'God's Own Country'-for the world to discover Kerala's wealth of natural beauty. It remains among the best tourism ad campaigns, earning the state a place among top 10 international destinations
SPIRITUALITY - THE GURUS OF COOL
Among the cult Indian gurus, no one had a bigger hold on western minds than 'Osho' Rajneesh. He's also perhaps the role model for the enterprise-building gurus of today
RETAIL SHOPPING - THE MALL MANIA
Shopping malls, a 1990s innovation in India, changed the way the Indian middle class shops. Their success now lies in being 'shoppertainment' destinations, offering something for everyone
CULINARY RENAISSANCE, 1978 - TANDOORI NIGHTS
ITC's Bukhara and Dum Pukht turned the world to tandoori cuisine and had an enormous impact on the F&B industry. Decades on, they are still a pit-stop for celebrities and heads of state visiting Delhi
INDIAN WRITING IN ENGLISH - REVENGE OF THE NATIVE
Rushdie lit the way but Indian writing in English has taken a life of its own in the past few decades, with translated Indian fiction most recently having its moment in the sun
INDIAN ART - A BRUSH WITH GOLD DUST
The 1990s economic liberalisation came as oxygen, lighting up the Indian art scene. Today, artworks by established masters routinely go for astronomical amounts
FESTIVAL OF INDIA, 1982 - CULTURE CAPITAL
The Festival of India grew into a symbol of our 'soft power', introducing our art and aesthetics to a global audience while also helping rebrand our domestic products
THE INDIPOP TREND - DISCO GOES DESI
For ages, the film song ruled. Nothing else was audible. Then came Nazia, charioteered by Biddu, and Indian ears went into a pleasant madness. Literally, Disco Deewane. A whole genre was born
SHOLAY 1975 - THE BIRTH OF THE FANDEMIC
India had seen hits before. But Sholay seared into its collective psyche like a badland bullet. The effect was on a scale never seen before- one film creating a new mass folk culture. And a trail of monster blockbusters that still continues