COVID-19 Cases Rise To 5,732,518 In India, Death Toll Reaches 91,149

COVID-19 Cases Rise To 5,732,518 In India, Death Toll Reaches 91,149

NEW DELHI, Sept 24 (NNN-PTI) – The number of confirmed COVID-19 cases in India, this morning rose to 5,732,518, India’s federal health ministry said.

During the past 24 hours, 86,508 new cases were reported from across the country. Besides this 1,129 deaths were also recorded.

“The total number of confirmed COVID-19 cases across India is 5,732,518 and death toll is 91,149,” reads the information, released by the ministry.

According to ministry officials, 4,674,987 people have been discharged from hospitals, after showing improvement.

“The number of active cases in the country right now is 966,382,” the information, released by the ministry, further reads.

Meanwhile, 67,436,031 samples were tested so far, across the country, out of which 1,156,569 tests were conducted yesterday alone, Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR) said today.

Late yesterday evening, India’s junior railways minister, Suresh Angadi, died due to COVID-19, officials said. The 65-year-old Angadi died nearly two weeks after he tested positive for COVID-19 infection. He was admitted to AIIMS in Delhi after his condition worsened.

Meanwhile, Indian Prime Minister, Narendra Modi, emphasised on the need to increase focus on “effective testing, tracing, treatment and surveillance” to bring COVID-19 outbreak in the country under control.

“Effective messaging is necessary, due to the asymptomatic nature of the infection, which may lead to doubts about the efficacy of tests,” Modi said, during his virtual meet with chief ministers of seven states with the highest number of COVID-19 cases.

“In such a situation, rumours may rise. It might raise doubts in the minds of the people that testing is bad. Some people also make mistake of underestimating the severity of the infection.”

Modi laid emphasis on developing the habit of using face masks on a daily basis. He also announced that the limit of using the State Disaster Response Fund for COVID-19 specific infrastructure has been increased from 35 percent to 50 percent.

Globally India is the second worst-hit country due to the COVID-19 pandemic, behind the United States.– NNN-PTI

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