We are in the middle of a ferocious second wave of Covid in India.

It seems pointless to do postmortems. 

But one thing that has bothered me enormously over the last three months is the lack of attention to the new coronavirus variants.

#Thread
Around New Year, there was fleeting attention in India to the new variant rampaging through UK. 

Qs were asked about whether government was doing anything to prevent UK variant from entering India. 

No one seemed to dwell on the thought that new *Indian* variants could crop up.
The report said two mutations had been detected in samples from Maharashtra

"Doctors say the presence of E484K could explain why entire families are testing positive in Amravati that has recorded 2,843 new Covid-19 cases in last one week and a positivity rate of 56.7 per cent."
"In Yavatmal, the N440K mutation has been found in one of the four samples the district sent for genome sequencing. The district has 11.4 per cent positivity rate and 507 new cases in last one week."
Worse, one of the mutations was "associated with evading antibody response", the report pointed out.

Which means even if you have antibodies from a previous infection or a vaccine, the mutation could get past it.
The health authorities in Maharashtra did the classic thing: they issued a denial.

But the next day Dr Randeep Guleria of AIIMS said the new strain found in Amravati was “highly transmissible and dangerous”.
Without genome sequencing, evidence cannot be generated.

And governments can continue to conveniently say there is no evidence to link the new variants to the surge!
But instead of underlining the significance of this finding in language that common people can understand, it obfuscated:

“Genomic sequencing and epidemiological studies are continuing to further analyse the situation."
Three weeks later, it still hasn't told us what those studies have found.

But the consensus among experts is that the new variants are playing a big role in the second wave.
But a basic question that's bothering me – if we as a country had reacted with enough alarm to early signs of new Indian variants, if the govt had stepped up genome sequencing, if we had more data, if the data was shared with the public, could the second wave have been blunted?
This is not a rhetorical question.

I'm genuinely curious about what a more heightened response to new Indian variants could have achieved.

If you have thoughts, please do share.

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