Skip to content
Search

Latest Stories

India has record high of 69,000 more Covid-19 infections

INDIA counted another record high of new coronavirus infections Thursday (20) as it ramped up testing to more than 900,000 a day.

The 69,652 new cases pushed India's total past 2.8 million, of which 2 million have recovered, the health ministry said.


The country also recorded 977 coronavirus fatalities in the past 24 hours, raising total deaths to 53,866, the ministry said.

The Covid-19 illnesses and deaths are thought to be far higher around the world due to limited testing and other factors.

India has conducted 3 million tests for the virus, but experts have urged increasing its testing capacity greatly, given India has the world's second-highest population of 1.4 billion people.

It has the third-most cases in the world, behind the US and Brazil, and has the fourth highest number of deaths behind the US, Brazil and Mexico.

India’s nationwide lockdown imposed in late March began easing in May and is now largely being enforced in high-risk areas.

On Wednesday (19), authorities ordered reopening of hotels and weekly markets in the Indian capital that were closed for nearly four months. The situation improved in the Indian capital with only 12 deaths reported in the past 24 hours.

Delhi has about 11,000 active cases after more than 139,000 people were infected.

Four of India’s 28 states now account for 63 per cent of total fatalities and 54.6 per cent of the caseload. Western Maharashtra state and three southern states of Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh and Karnataka are the worst-hit regions.

More For You

Climate change could increase child stunting in south Asia by 2050, a study finds

Researchers at the University of California Santa Barbara examined how exposure to extremely climate conditions during pregnancy impacts children's health

iStock - Representative image

Climate change could increase child stunting in south Asia by 2050, a study finds

Highlights

  • Over 3 million additional cases of stunting projected in south Asian children by 2050 due to climate change.
  • Hot-humid conditions four times more harmful than heat alone during pregnancy's third trimester.
  • Early and late pregnancy stages identified as most vulnerable periods for foetal development.

Climate change-driven heat and humidity could lead to more than three million additional cases of stunting among south Asia's children by 2050, according to a new study that highlights the severe health risks facing the world's most densely populated region.

Researchers at the University of California Santa Barbara examined how exposure to extremely hot and humid conditions during pregnancy impacts children's health, focusing on height-for-age measurements, a key indicator of chronic health status in children under five.

Keep ReadingShow less