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The Hindu
The Hindu
National
Bindu Shajan Perappadan

Revised guidelines for home isolation of COVID-19 patients

Visitors at LNJP hospital amid rising cases of Omicron variant of Coronavirus, in New Delhi on January 4, 2022. (Source: The Hindu)

People aged above 60 and those with comorbid conditions such as hypertension, diabetes, heart disease, chronic lung/liver/kidney disease, cerebrovascular disease etc. shall be allowed home isolation for COVID-19 only after proper evaluation by the treating medical officers, the Union Health Ministry said on Wednesday.

Also read: Third Covid wave has hit Delhi, 10,000 cases expected on Jan 5: Satyendar Jain

The Ministry issued the revised guidelines for home isolation applicable to those who have been clinically assessed and assigned as mild/asymptomatic cases. They say that those suffering from immunocompromised status (HIV, transplant recipients, cancer therapy etc.) are not recommended for home isolation and shall be allowed home isolation only after proper evaluation by the treating medical officers.

In another important revision, the Ministry noted that patients under home isolation would stand discharged and end isolation after at least 7 days — from the existing 14 days — have passed from testing positive and no fever for three successive days and they shall continue wearing masks. “There is no need for retesting after the home isolation period is over. Asymptomatic contacts of infected individuals need not undergo test,’’ it stated.

For the caregiver

For the caregiver, the Ministry observed that this should ideally be someone who has completed the vaccination schedule and should be available to provide care on 24 x7 basis. “A communication link between the caregiver and a medical officer is a prerequisite for the entire duration of home isolation.”

Also read: Two Deputy CMs, three Ministers of Bihar found infected

“Further a designated control room contact number at the district /sub district level shall be provided to the family to get suitable guidance for undertaking testing, clinical management related guidance, assignment of a hospital bed, if warranted. Such cases should have the requisite facility at their residence for self-isolation and for quarantining the family contacts,’’ the Ministry pointed out.

The seven-page revised guidelines states that patients should seek medical attention if there are serious signs or symptoms including -- unresolved high-grade fever (more than 100° F for more than 3 days), difficulty in breathing, dip in oxygen saturation (SpO2 ≤ 93% on room air at least 3 readings within 1 hour) or respiratory rate >24/ min, persistent pain/pressure in the chest, mental confusion or inability to arouse and severe fatigue and myalgia.

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