India's R-value Below 1 Since September; Kolkata, Bengaluru Still in Red: Survey
India's R-value Below 1 Since September; Kolkata, Bengaluru Still in Red: Survey
An R-value lesser than 1 means the disease is spreading slowly.

India’s R-value, which reflects how rapidly the coronavirus pandemic is spreading, has remained below 1 since September, suggesting that the infection rate is declining, according to a study. The Reproduction number or R refers to how many people an infected person infects on an average. In other words, it tells how ‘efficiently’ a virus is spreading.

After being over one in the first half of October, Mumbai’s R-value has dropped below one, according to researchers of the Chennai-based Institute of Mathematical Sciences. The R-value for COVID-19 in Mumbai between October 16 and 18 was 0.94, they said.

An R-value lesser than 1 means the disease is spreading slowly. Conversely, if R is greater than 1, the number of infected people is increasing in each round – technically, this is what is called the epidemic phase.

The bigger the number than 1, the faster the rate of spreading of the disease in the population. According to figures calculated by researchers of the Chennai-based Institute of Mathematical Sciences, the R-value of top 10 states with most number of active cases was below 1 till October 18.

However, some of the cities continue to show a rising number of active cases. Kolkata has an R-value over 1, perhaps unsurprising given the mass gatherings during the (recently-concluded) Durga Puja, said Sitabhra Sinha, who is leading the research. Bengaluru also has R-value over 1 it has been so ever since mid-September while the R-values of Chennai, Pune and Mumbai are just below 1.

The country’s R-value, calculated between September 25 and October 18, was 0.90. Between August 30 and September 3, the value was 1.11. It started declining since then the R-value was 0.94 between September 4 and 7, 0.86 between September 11 and 15, 0.92 between September 14 and 19 and 0.87 between September 17 and 21, as per the study.

After the brutal second wave of coronavirus between March to May this year, the daily COVID-19 cases have been on a decline. On Tuesday, India logged 13,058 new coronavirus infections, the lowest in 231 days, according to the Union Health Ministry’s data. The daily rise in new coronavirus infections has been below 30,000 for 25 straight days and less than 50,000 daily new cases have been reported for 114 consecutive days now.

The active cases comprise 0.54 per cent of the total infections, the lowest since March 2020, while the national Covid-19 recovery rate was recorded at 98.14 per cent, the highest since March 2020, the ministry said.

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