Thiruvananthapuram (Kerala):Once teeming with patients requiring treatment for various diseases, government and private hospitals across Kerala have witnessed a dramatic and drastic fall in people visiting their Out-Patient Departments (OPDs) ever since India's first coronavirus patient was reported from the state on January 30.
On normal days, according to official figures, on an average of over 4 lakh patients visited various state-run medical centres in the previous fiscal. On Friday the numbers have crashed to a mere 10 per cent of the earlier footfall.
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At present, over 1.40 lakh persons are under observation in Kerala, with 357 coronavirus patients.
Kerala's health system comprises district hospital in each of the 14 districts and healthcare institutions at the grass-roots level, besides eight medical colleges and the fledgeling private healthcare centres.
A health professional attached to the state's premier medical college hospital in the state capital said that as compared with around 5,000 outpatients on normal days, a mere 200 persons visited the OPDs nowadays.
"It's understandable that as this hospital is one of the centres to treat COVID-19 patients and suspected cases. So, none would like to take a risk," said the professional, who did not wish to be identified.