Bangladesh faces harder days as Covid kills 231 more

With the Delta variant of Covid-19 tearing through Bangladesh, the country reported 231 more deaths in 24 hours till Sunday morning.

Besides, 14,844 people came out positive for the virus after the test of 49,529 samples, said a handout issued by the Directorate General of Health Services (DGHS).

It said the fresh cases took Bangladesh’s total fatality to 20,916 while the caseload to 1,264,328.

Meanwhile, the daily test positivity rate marked a negligible fall to 29.97% from Saturday’s 30.24 %, while the World Health Organization (WHO) recommends a 5% or below rate.

On average, the country has been seeing nearly 14,000 cases and over 200 deaths daily for a week.

However, the recovery rate rose to 86.47% from the previous day’s 86.29 % and the case fatality rate fell to 1.65% from last day’s 1.66 %, said the DGHS media release.

During the 24-hour period, 15,054 patients recovered from the fatal disease.

Among the latest fatalities, the highest 77 deaths were recorded in Dhaka division followed by 53 in Chattogram, 44 in Khulna, 18 in Rangpur, 13 in Rajshahi, 11 in Mymensingh, six in Barishal, and nine in Sylhet divisions.

Of them, 139 were men and 92 women.

Among them, two were between 11-20 years of age, three between 21-30, 19 between 31-40, 34 between 41-50, 46 between 51-60, 72 between 61-70, 45 between 71-80, nine between 81-90, one between 91-100 years old.

July the most fatal

Logging highest 6,182 deaths and 336,226 new cases, July has become the most fatal month since the reporting of first Covid cases in the country in March, 2020.

This month, the country saw a record number of deaths and cases almost every day.

The country’s highest-ever 258 Covid deaths were reported on July 27 and record shattering 16,230 cases were reported on July 28.

Besides, the case positivity rate also reached its peak 32.55% on July 24 while the highest 56, 157 sample tests were completed on July 28.

The number of Covid testing labs increased to 649 in July from June’s 565 labs which was only 6 on January this year.

Earlier, the country saw 2,404 Covid deaths in April, 1,169 in May and 1,884 in June marking the most fatal months of this year.

Also, July was the most fatal month of 2020, reporting 1,264 deaths followed by 1,197 deaths in June that year.

Source: United News of Bangladesh

Factories reopen amid Covid surge as ‘economy falters’

Export-oriented industries resumed operation on Sunday, the 10th day of the ongoing stringent lockdown, amid warnings against Covid surge as workers started returning to their workplaces without maintaining health protocols.

The workers in their thousands have been on their way back to their workplaces in Narayanganj, Gazipur and Mymensingh in Dhaka division since Friday after the government’s announcement of reopening factories.

The workers took their arduous journeys to get back to their workplaces as public transport remained suspended due to the lockdown.

They walked miles for miles or moved on in hired auto-rickshaws, motorbikes, goods-laden vehicles in their desperate bid to join work.

Later, the government on Saturday night allowed public transport to operate until 12 pm on Sunday to facilitate the return of workers.

Buses started plying roads from early Sunday and people were seen entering the capital through Gabtoli, Abdullahpur, Mohakhali, Sayedabad, Postagola and Babubazar point by bus or on foot.

The Covid-19 crisis has hit the country’s economy hard and jeopardized its impressive achievements in poverty reduction, according to economists.

Akhter Hossain, a traffic inspector (Uttara), said “As the government declared the reopening of factories from today so we allowed the public transport to enter the capital since morning. No transport will be allowed to go outside Dhaka after 12 pm.”

Public transport from the adjacent districts of Dhaka, including Mymensingh, Tangail and Manikganj districts, were seen entering the capital, he said.

However, the number of long-haul vehicles was hardly seen on the roads.

Asaduzzaman, traffic inspector (Mohakhali), said, “We’re checking the buses moving on the streets whether they’re following health guidelines.”

Besides, the checking of private vehicles is going on like the other days, he added.

The launch services also resumed on Sunday morning. The launch owners claimed that they started launch operations late due to a shortage of passengers.

UNB’s Tangail Correspondent reports that light traffic congestion was seen on Dhaka-Tangail-Bangabandhu Bridge due to pressure of Dhaka-bound vehicles.

Besides, highway police are working to control the situation.

A record surge in the number of Covid cases and fatalities in recent days prompted the government to enforce a nationwide stringent lockdown, suspending all outdoor activities unless there is an emergency.

Covid-19 situation

As health authorities scramble to prevent the spread of the Delta variant, Bangladesh added 218 fatalities to its national tally on Saturday.

The country registered over 200 single-day fatalities for the last six days as it is fighting a horrific wave of the pandemic that overwhelmed its healthcare systems.

The country recorded 9,369 new cases on Saturday after testing 30,980 samples, and reported the highest daily Covid-19 fatality number – 258 – on July 27 and 16,230 infections the next day, according to the Directorate General of Health Services (DGHS).

There have been 1,249,484 positive cases and 20,685 coronavirus-related deaths here since the pandemic began, the DGHS said.

Source: United News of Bangladesh

BGMEA urges buyers not to penalise suppliers for lockdown-caused delays

The Bangladesh Garment Manufacturers and Exporters Association (BGMEA) has written to the buyers’ representatives, through the Buyers Forum and individual buyers, requesting them not to penalise suppliers for any reasonable delays caused by the national lockdown.

BGMEA President Faruque Hassan on Sunday said they wrote the letter, taking stock of the current situation.

Many factories now have a huge backlog of orders due to the recent strict countrywide lockdown, he said.

“The readymade garment (RMG) industry resumed operations today. Production levels at many factories have significantly fallen while maintaining the health protocols. However, the cost of operation has increased due to workers’ transportation requirements and other issues,” said the BGMEA president.

Source: United News of Bangladesh

Rajshahi sees 18 more Covid-19 deaths in 24 hrs

Eighteen more Covid patients have died at Rajshahi Medical College Hospital (RMCH) in 24 hours till Sunday morning, health officials said.

Six of the patients died of Covid-19 while seven died with symptoms of the virus and the remaining died with post-Covid complications, said Director General of the hospital Brigadier General Shamim Yazdani.

Besides, six of them were from Rajshahi district, four from Natore, one each from Chapainawabganj and Kushtia and three each from Naogaon and Pabna districts.

Besides, 140 people have tested positive for Covid at the hospital during the 24-hour period. Some 428 samples were tested in two laboratories of the district during the period, the director said.

Currently, 418 patients are undergoing treatment at the hospital which has 513 beds.

RMCH has been one of the most stretched hospitals in the country during the second wave of Covid-19, particularly since the latter part of May when the deadly Delta variant of the virus was identified in multiple samples in Rajshahi division.

Source: United News of Bangladesh

68 more return to Dhaka from Thailand by special flight

Bangladesh Embassy in Bangkok has facilitated repatriation of a group of 68 Bangladeshi, Indian and Thai nationals from Thailand to Bangladesh by a special Biman Bangladesh Airlines flight.

The flight was arranged on a self-payment basis in line with Bangladesh Government’s commitment to extend all possible assistance and support to stranded Bangladeshis abroad.

The Biman Bangladesh flight arrived at Hazrat Shahjalal International Airport on Saturday, said the Ministry of Foreign Affairs on Sunday.

Ambassador of Bangladesh to Thailand Mohammed Abdul Hye thanked the Thai Government for extending their cooperation in this regard.

Since the outbreak of the Covid-19 pandemic last year, the Embassy of Bangladesh in Bangkok has so far facilitated 16 special flights from Bangkok to Dhaka in coordination with the authorities concerned in Bangladesh and Thailand.

Officials of the Embassy saw the passengers off at the Suvarnabhumi International Airport and extended necessary consular and other assistance for their departure formalities.

Source: United News of Bangladesh

Traffic police killed in city road crash

A traffic police constable was killed after being hit by a microbus at Sher-e-Bangla Nagar on Sunday morning, police said.

The deceased was identified as Md Helal, 50, a constable of Mohammadpur zone of Tejgaon division of the traffic police. He hailed from Kaliakair of Gazipur.

Eyewitnesses said the accident took place as the microbus hit Helal while he was on duty in front of Shaheed Suhrawardy Medical College and Hospital at Sher-e-Bangla Nagar around 11 am.

Later, he was taken to the emergency department of Dhaka Medical College and Hospital (DMCH) where a duty doctor declared him dead.

Md Bachchu Mia, police inspector of DMCH police camp, said the body has been kept at the hospital morgue for an autopsy.

Source: United News of Bangladesh

Harmful Effects of Mobile Phones on Children’s Health

Effects of Mobile Phone on Children’s Physical Health

Media use like movie and drama watching, video gameplay, doing everything on mobile, etc., can severely damage the physical condition of children. Different streaming services, gaming apps, and social media can be accessed from mobile phones nowadays. Here are some serious damages mobile phones occur to kids’ bodies:

Sleeping Issue

Cell phones with backlights produce light with short-wavelength, known as blue light. LED lights produce blue light, which is proven to diminish or delay a person’s natural synthesis of melatonin at night, as well as lessen sensations of drowsiness.

Children are especially vulnerable to sleep difficulties caused by blue-light-emitting electronic gadgets. Many studies had shown a connection between using screen time before bed and increased sleep latency, which is the average time someone takes to fall asleep. Furthermore, children who are accustomed to using these gadgets at night often do not get enough sleep and feel weary the following day.

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Obesity

Spending more time on phones lessens children’s interest to go outside and playing with other playmates. They are being habituated to play on phones and losing the innate nature of venturing outside and doing physical work. It has increased the rate of being obese among children.

Food marketing might also influence dietary choices that lead to children’s weight gain. Advertising bombards teenagers’ eyes via social media and various streaming videos or music material. Seeing the meal on phones with influencing colors and punchline marketing may elicit an instant desire. Advertising may sometimes be deceptive, conveying signals about a food’s healthiness that aren’t always true.

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Back and Neck Pain

Pain in the back and neck are caused by strain on a person’s spine and is often known as cervical discomfort. Such pain has now become the most prevalent kind in a child’s body. The use of devices for extended periods of time adds to each of these problems, resulting in greater discomfort. The constant use of devices contributes the most to the cause of this issue.

Poor posture when sitting, sleeping, studying, or using a smartphone for extended periods of time without changing their position and sitting incorrectly causes neck and back discomfort from a young age. Cervical issues at such a young age are very dangerous since they tend to last a lifetime, impacting the child’s gesture for the rest of his or her life if not addressed promptly.

Effects of Mobile Phone on Children’s Mental Health

This present generation is growing in a time when all the information of the world can be reached from a device at their hands. They can connect to whomever they want via different social networks. There are apps that can track down where a friend is located. Some apps tell what those friends are doing, playing, and wearing. Loads of games are just one tap away from being installed on their phones. In a sentence, the scope of entertainment has become boundless. But these are also occurring some side-effects in children’s minds. Such as

Communication Discomfort

Social scientists have termed the way children are learning to communicate through their phones as deindividuated communication. This way, children don’t have to communicate being in front of anybody. They use texting and social media to communicate, being totally anonymous or faceless. It’s easier to hurt people or to be mean when you are not in front of someone.

Kids are sharing things with each other and behaving in a way that a normal person will never think of doing in the presence of others. They are learning to be more aggressive and practicing extreme violence from their childhood.

Addiction

From the design to the way of operating different options, phones are the most addicting of all inventions. Studies have revealed that about 50% of teens are so much attached to their cell phones that they can’t function a single day without them. It can damage or avert brains development in a way that kids have to suffer throughout their lives.

Social Reluctance

Adolescence is the most critical period for social skill development. They learn how to offer and accept friendships, how to settle a disagreement, and what to do and what not in social etiquette through engaging with their peers. However, when teenagers spend less time face-to-face with their peers, they get fewer chances to develop such social skills. They grow more self-conscious in social situations, preferring to connect through email or emoji rather than in person. Despite their internet ties, they live fake, lonely life.

Depression

Several studies have been conducted worldwide on this factor. Because depression is the most lethal killer among all psychological diseases. In a recent study, it’s been found that teens spending more time doing different non-screen activities are happier than the others. Kids spending more time on their phones are likely to be less happy, lonely, and suffering from depression and anxiety.

Kids don’t spend time with each other nowadays. Hence, the kid’s homicidal case has degraded, but the suicide rate has increased. Girl kids are more vulnerable to depression than boys. Children who suffer from anxiety can’t get snap out of it. The symptoms continue to appear even in their adulthood.

Conclusion

Children are more vulnerable to the process of their information intake. When they can absorb knowledge and entertainment that much easier, they become unable to study as it takes much effort to learn something by books and papers. So, smartphones, if not used reasonably, will destroy the children’s future by making them weak physically and mentally.

Source: United News of Bangladesh

Khulna div registers another 40 Covid deaths, 880 cases

Covid claimed 40 more lives and infected 880 people in Khulna division in the past 24 hours, health officials said on Sunday.

According to the health director’s office, 16 people died in Kushtia, five each in Khulna, and Jhenaidah, seven in Jashore, three in Bagerhat, two each in Narail and Chuadanga districts.

Khulna district has registered the lowest deaths in the past one and half months on Sunday with five deaths, said officials.

Besides, some 880 new Covid infections have been detected in 10 districts of the division in the past 24 hours, pushing up the total cases to 93, 812.

Similarly, the total death toll in the division has now reached 2,428, said the officials.

In Khulna division, the first case of Covid-19 was detected in Chuadanga on March 19, 2020.

Source: United News of Bangladesh

Preparations underway to vaccinate 1 crore people by next week: Minister

Preparations are going on to vaccinate 1 crore people of the country against Covid-19 within the next week, said Health Minister Zahid Maleque on Sunday.

The minister said this while attending the inauguration ceremony of the 1st year MBBS class at BCPS auditorium in the capital.

The health minister said the return of factory workers to their workplaces without maintaining the health protocols in one day’s notice might worsen the Covid situation.

As Covid infections keep rising in the country, he urged all to abide by health guidelines unfailingly.

A mass vaccination will start at the union level on August 7 and elderly people who do not have NID cards will be able to get vaccinated, said Maleque.

“We’re planning to bring pregnant women under the vaccination progamme, ” he added.

Old people are getting infected by young ones and 80% of the Covid-infected older people are dying, the minister mentioned.

Bangladesh launched a nationwide Covid-19 vaccination drive with Oxford University-AstraZeneca vaccine on February 7.

The first dose of the Covid vaccination was suspended on April 26 amid uncertainty over the availability of the vaccine doses from Serum Institute of India as per contract following a rapid surge in the virus cases and deaths in the neighbouring country.

After about two months’ break, Bangladesh resumed the mass vaccination on July 8 with Chinese Sinopharm vaccine.

Source: United News of Bangladesh

Public engagement missing in govt policy to fight Covid-19: Speakers

Speakers at a virtual dialogue on Sunday said it would not be possible to tackle the existing coronavirus situation with only the government’s initiatives as the public engagement is crucially needed here, which remains missing in the policy of the State.

“If all want to face this adverse situation bureaucratically, it’ll not work. Social engagement and initiatives will be required here alongside the government’s initiatives. Otherwise, I think Bangladesh would be affected so immensely,” said Bangladesh Workers Party MP Fazle Hossain Badsha (Rajshahi-2).

Citizen’s Platform for SDGs and the Hunger Project jointly arranged the dialogue titled “’Initiative for local people engagement in tackling Corona” through an online platform.

Badsha said the administration was entrusted with the responsibility (to deal Covid-19 pandemic). “The concept of public engagement is not there in the decisions of the State (Government),” he added.

“I think that it is not possible to reduce the Covid-19 infection (rate) without public engagement and their organised power…. A trained volunteer group is needed today to serve the people in this crisis,” said the lawmaker.

Convenor of the Citizen’s Platform Dr Debapriya Bhattacharya said now there is no alternative to a public engagement initiative in combating the pandemic.

“But the biggest obstacle here is the absence of necessary framework and guidelines on the part of the government for such a public engagement initiative. This absence is also undermining the effectiveness of various government stimulus delivery and awareness-raising about vaccination and health protocols,” he said.

He questioned whether there is any ‘mental barrier’ among political leaders to engage the country’s non-government development initiatives or whether the political leaders consider them (non-government organisations) as their competitors not thinking them as partners.

Noting that it is the administration not political leaders who play the greater role in tackling the pandemic now at the local level, he also questioned if the administration also feels any sort of discomfort or mental barrier to engage private initiatives.

To fight the pandemic in a coordinated way, it is urgently needed to have a national guideline over public engagement shunning the narrow attitude towards private ventures, said Dr Debapriya Bhattacharya.

Noted economist Prof Rehman Sobhan stressed the need for collective action in coordination of the government and private initiatives to fight the pandemic. “Civil Societies are not competitors rather they are partners (of the government),” he said.

Country Director of the Hunger Project Dr Badiul Alam Majumdar in his keynote presentation said the Corona Resilient Village (CRV) initiative is essential to check coronavirus transmission in the grassroots.

He said now the coronavirus has already spread throughout the country due to community transmission. It’ll take a long time to bring all the people under the vaccination coverage. Besides, there is still uncertainty even about the effectiveness of vaccines.

“So, this coronavirus problem will not go away so easily. We’ll have to lead life coping up with it…This is why we took the CRV initiative last year,” said Dr Majumdar explaining that the CRV initiative is based on volunteer work and run by the community leadership.

Noted personality Prof Rounaq Jahan said people are much aware but don’t practice the health protocols. “So, it is essential now to reduce the gap between awareness and practice,” she said.

Mentioning that the government frequently changes its Covid decisions, Prof Jahan said, “The government will have to stick to its policy (not changing it frequently), if it wants to enforce more successfully and reduce the awareness-practice gap.”

Swapan Kumar Das, Chairman of Fakirhat Upazila in Bagerhat, said the coordination between the public representatives and the administration in the fight against coronavirus was not seen in many places.

“But the lack of coordination is not seen here in my place (upazila), though the public representatives don’t have so much responsibility here as they are just assisting the administration,” he said.

Awami League MP (Meherpur-2) Mohammad Shahiduzzaman and public health expert Dr Lelin Choudhury, among others, address the dialogue presided over by Dr Mushtaque Raza Chowdhury.

Source: United News of Bangladesh

Covid patient in Chandpur ‘attempts suicide’

A Covid-19 patient, undergoing treatment at Chandpur General Government Hospital, reportedly attempted suicide by jumping off the second floor of the hospital on Saturday.

Witnesses said Beauty Begum, 35, wife of Khokon Mia of Algi village in Haimchar upazila, has been undergoing treatment at the isolation ward of the hospital for the past 11 days.

When Beauty’s mother-in-law who was attending her went to the toilet around 6 PM, she jumped off the second floor of the hospital, injuring her right leg and backbone, said its medical officer, Omar Faruk.

Though she is still Corona positive, Beauty was doing well, Faruk said, adding that she is now being treated for her bone injuries.

Source: United News of Bangladesh

Worsening Dengue: 237 patients hospitalised in 24 hrs

Amid a concerning spike of Aedes mosquito-borne disease, 237 new dengue cases were reported across the country by the health authorities on Sunday morning.

The outbreak of dengue fever with more than 100 dengue patients reported daily for more than a week has sparked new worries as the country’s health services are already overburdened with increasing Covid cases and fatalities.

Of the new dengue cases, 218 were reported in Dhaka while 19 were from outside the capital, said the Directorate General of Health Services (DGHS).

According to the (DGHS), 862 patients are currently receiving treatment at different hospitals across the country.

A vast majority of the dengue patients are from Dhaka as only 34 of them were reported being treated in hospitals outside the capital.

Some 2,895 patients have been admitted to different hospitals with dengue since January and 2,029 of them have been released after they recovered.

The DGHS reported 1,193 dengue cases and three confirmed dengue-related deaths in 2020.

According to official statistics, 101,354 dengue cases and 179 deaths were recorded in Bangladesh in 2019.

Dengue fever was first reported in Bangladesh in 2000, claiming 93 lives that year. In the years that followed, the country learned to deal with the disease much better.

The fatalities had almost fallen to zero at one stage, before surging again in 2018, leading to the severe outbreak the following year.

Source: United News of Bangladesh