The Hindu Editorial Vocabulary– Nov 24, 2022; Day 376
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Difficult Word/ PhraseContextual Sense
Mandatory Required by rule
Vulnerable Susceptible to attack
Spike A sharp rise followed by a sharp decline
Peak To reach the highest point; attain maximum intensity, activity
Far cry very different from (something or someone)
Backlog an amount of work, etc. that has not yet been done and should have been done already
Case fatality rate the proportion of people who die from a specified disease among all individuals diagnosed with the disease over a certain period of time
Lineage the series of families that somebody comes from originally
Concomitant Occurring with or following as a consequence
Precise Sharply exact
Comorbidities the coexistence of two or more related medical conditions
Transmissive Capable of being transmitted; derived, or handed down, from one to another
Lethality The quality of being deadly
Onset The beginning or early stages

Time to ease norms: On COVID-19 restrictions

Masks must remain mandatory (Required by rule) only for the vulnerable (Susceptible to attack) and in health-care settings

As the third winter begins in India after the COVID-19 pandemic began in January 2020, fresh daily infections of the novel coronavirus — there was a small spike (A sharp rise followed by a sharp decline) in July and August — have been dipping since the third wave peaked (To reach the highest point; attain maximum intensity, activity) in late January 2022. Daily new cases nationally dropped below the 1,000-mark after November first week, and below 500 in the last four days. While the case decline may not be a true reflection of the actual level of infection in the population, given the low level of testing across the country, the test positivity rate and the number of hospitalisations due to moderate to severe COVID-19 disease are at a low level — a far cry from (very different from (something or someone)) the peak of the second wave in 2021. COVID-19 deaths too have been very low, with many States not reporting any for days together; Kerala has been reporting some backlog (an amount of work, etc. that has not yet been done and should have been done already) deaths on certain days but nil fresh deaths on many days. Nationally, the case fatality rate (the proportion of people who die from a specified disease among all individuals diagnosed with the disease over a certain period of time) was 1.19% as of November 22. The situation in India is vastly different from what it is like in a few other countries where the daily infections are witnessing a sharp spike. Even the extremely high transmissive Omicron sub-lineages (the series of families that somebody comes from originally) and recombinant lineages have only caused a small spike in fresh cases but no concomitant (Occurring with or following as a consequence) increase in hospitalisations or deaths in India.

Given the very low number of cases and hospitalisations, the situation in India is no longer cause for concern. Even with most businesses and educational institutions back to functioning as in the pre-pandemic days and large gatherings being seen even in poorly ventilated places with almost no voluntary mask wearing, there has been no spike in cases since the peak of the third wave. This makes a strong case to ease any mandatory COVID-appropriate behaviour, masks included. A week ago, India made mask wearing optional for air passengers precisely (Sharply exact) because of the improved ground situation. It is only in hospitals and health-care settings that mask wearing should remain mandatory. The low level of infection notwithstanding, it is advisable that the vulnerable population including the elderly and those with comorbidities (the coexistence of two or more related medical conditions) at least wear a mask to reduce the risk of infection. Long COVID is real and poses a risk even to otherwise healthy people. The virus is evolving, and the emerging variants of concern will, by default, be even more highly transmissive (Capable of being transmitted; derived, or handed down, from one to another). Their lethality (The quality of being deadly) cannot be predicted as transmission happens prior to disease onset (The beginning or early stages) and so the selection pressure is for higher transmission and not disease severity.

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