Millions Face Double Disaster as Second COVID-19 Wave Hits

Millions Face Double Disaster as Second COVID-19 Wave Hits

  • By Oxfam India
  • 01 Jun, 2021

Millions Facing Double Disaster as Second Covid Wave Overwhelm Rural India

June 1, 2021 l New Delhi: The second wave has left public healthcare in shambles. People have lost their lives due to lack of proper medical facilities and infrastructure. The situation is getting a little under control in the cities, but it is still very grim in rural India where there are issues related to access to medical facilities, hospitals, doctors, technically trained staff or testing facilities.

Around 65% Indians out of the total population of approximately 1.3 billion live in rural India which hardly has rural health infrastructure. As per the Rural Health Statistics 2019, there is a shortfall of 43,736 Sub Centres (23 percent), 8764 Primary Health Centres/PHC (28 percent) and 2865 Community Health Centres/CHC (37 percent) across the country.

Oxfam India CEO Amitabh Behar said: “There was a time when we woke up every day to news of death of a friend, family, acquaintance. Villages were worse off - with no access to health care, no testing; in some cases, 20-25 people from a village died within a few days. No one in India has remained untouched by this pandemic. And most of these lives could have been saved if there was proper, adequate, and affordable healthcare for all."

People outside the major cities do not have the same access to social media to reach out for help or raise awareness of what is happening. Lack of testing, healthcare facilities and postmortems mean large number of cases in rural communities are not being recorded.

Apart from a healthcare calamity, India was already reeling under economic stress. The sporadic lockdowns and containment zones mean that once again it is the informal sector workers who are going to be worst hit. Latest report from the Centre for Monitoring Indian Economy (CMIE) states that over 1 crore Indians lot their jobs in the second Covid wave and around 97% household incomes have fallen since the start of the pandemic last year.

Millions who slipped into poverty last year due to job losses are now facing another looming crisis: hunger. India already has the largest population facing food shortage in the world, with an estimated 189 million people in India already undernourished before the pandemic began

While healthcare is the primary focus at this point in time, Oxfam India is also reaching out to some of the most marginalised and vulnerable communities with food. In the long run we will work towards providing livelihood support to informal sector workers and their families.

Oxfam India CEO Amitabh Behar said: “We are reaching out to public healthcare institutions, district administrations and COVID Care Centres with medical equipment such as oxygen concentrators, patient monitoring systems, oximeters, oxygen nasal masks, and thermometers along with PPE kits and safety kits for frontline health workers. We will also reach the most marginalised and vulnerable communities with food, ration, and safety kits.”

Through Mission Sanjeevani, our COVID-19 response in the second wave, we have provided 96 Oxygen Concentrators, 155 Oxygen Cylinders (40 Lts), over 1200 Oxygen Nasal Masks, 12 BiPAP machines, over 5000 diagnostic tools/equipment of various types, 1630 PPE kits, 90 ICU beds, community safety kits and one month’s dry ration supply to 15,500 people so far.

In addition to this, Oxfam India plans to strengthen the rural health ecosystem, in some of the most marginalised and vulnerable communities, by providing the necessary tools, training and inexpensive equipment needed by frontline health workers like Accredited Social Health Activists (ASHAs) for early identification of cases and timely referral to health centres, and hiring doctors, staff nurses and paramedics, wherever possible.

In the first month of our response to the second wave, we have provided support in Maharashtra, Delhi, Chhattisgarh, Karnataka, West Bengal, Tamil Nadu, and Uttar Pradesh. While continuing to work in these states among the most marginalised and vulnerable communities, Oxfam India will also look at expanding to Bihar, Odisha, Assam, Telangana, Andhra Pradesh, Kerala, and Gujarat.

Notes to the Editors:

  1. In the second wave, Oxfam India is working with the government and local administrations to deploy 7 Oxygen generation plants, 25 ventilators, 500 Oxygen concentrators, 3000 Oxygen cylinders (40 lts capacity), 11800 Oxygen nasal masks, 300 BiPAP machines, 1200 ICU beds, around 16000 diagnostic equipment of different types, and 19000 PPE kits. We are also aiming to provide a one-month dry ration supply and community safety kits to 225,000 people.
  2. Oxfam India also plans to train 35000 ASHA workers and provide them with medical kits for larger community outreach to ensure Covid appropriate behaviour and also tackle the issue of vaccine hesitancy.
  3. Since March 2020, Oxfam India has been working in 16 states, reaching the most marginalised and vulnerable with medical supplies, food kits, cooked meals, safety and PPE kits, cash, and livelihood trainings.

About Oxfam India

Oxfam India is a movement of people working to end discrimination and create a free and just society. We work to ensure that Adivasis, Dalits, Muslims, and women and girls have safe violence-free lives with freedom to speak their mind, equal opportunities to realize their rights, and a discrimination-free future.

 📢Oxfam India is now on Telegram. Click here to join our Telegram channel and stay tuned to the latest updates and insights on social and development issues.


Related Stories

India Discrimination Report

15 Aug, 2021

Tumkur, Karnataka

Oxfam India’s First Oxygen Plant in Tumkur

The 300 LPM Oxygen plant, set up under Oxfam India’s COVID-19 response ‘Mission Sanjeevani’, at the 80-bed government hospital at Koratagere in Tumkur in Karnataka will cater to people from 46 surrounding villages. Tumkur MLA, Dalit Leader and former deputy chief minister of Karnataka, G Parameshwara inaugurated the Oxygen plant on 26 July 2021.
Read More

India Discrimination Report

02 Aug, 2021

New Delhi

Delivering Hope and Dignity to Refugees

Oxfam India has been supporting communities worst affected by the pandemic, across India, for over a year now. At the heart of our response are communities already living on the margins such as daily wage workers, transgender communities, informal sector workers and differently abled people. We partnered with HAI to extend our support to refugees from Pakistan living in Delhi.
Read More

Private Sector Engagement

07 Jul, 2021

Assam

Labour Codes Training for Assam Tea Garden Workers

The Labour Codes will have significant impacts on the informal sector workers including the tea garden workers. A need was thus felt to train the workers around these Codes. The existing Plantation Labor Act, 1951 which used to govern the tea industry will be  subsumed under these Codes. Different aspects of the Act will now feature in these four codes. In the above context, Oxfam India in collaboration with Centre for Workers’ Management initiated a training programme for workers across seven districts of Assam, during the month of June. 
Read More

Women Livelihood

13 Apr, 2021

Sitamarhi, Bihar

Mushroom Cultivation Makes Communities Resilience

Oxfam India has been working with these communities through its disaster risk reduction programme since 2012. It was in 2017 that it finally started its livelihood intervention programme — mushroom cultivation and vermicomposting — with the women from the Musahar community. This proved useful during the lockdown in 2020.
Read More

img Become an Oxfam Supporter, Sign Up Today One of the most trusted non-profit organisations in India