Here’s a new puzzle for scientists, doctors and journalists tracking the spread of Covid-19 in India: the difference between the number of people tested by the government and the number of samples tested has been a constant and recurring figure of 890 every day, official data show.
As of 9 pm on April 4, India had tested 79,950 samples and 75,000 people, data from the Indian Council of Medical Research showed. Is this number meaningful in any way? Is it big enough? Can we take this number at face value? Experts have been debating.
For the first few weeks of the spread of Covid-19 in India, a lot of time was spent analysing if India was testing enough. The broad consensus was that for a country of 1.3 billion people, India was testing way too little. This was due to a restricted eligibility criteria and a shortage of testing kits, with the government still scrambling to assess the quality of kits and open up calls for supply.
But here’s something else to consider: When the singer Kanika Kapoor was suspected to be positive for Covid-19, she was tested multiple times. It was confusing for many who wanted to know: Were tests being wasted on her?
In fact, repeated testing is an important step in the protocol for any accurate diagnosis. It is done to rule out the possibility of false positive or false negative results, which sometimes turn up. So with this information in mind, what does it mean when we say India has done 79,950 tests? Are we testing enough?
Since March 2020, the Indian Council of Medical Research has been releasing data – albeit erratically – for the number of samples tested and the number of individuals tested.
The difference between these numbers remained a steady 890 for as long as the numbers of individuals tested were released. The council stopped including the number of people tested in its press releases from April 2.
Numeric mystery
The fact that the difference between number of samples and people tested keeps coming up to 890 is is strange for a couple of reasons: First, given that an average patient or suspect is tested at least twice if not thrice, the difference should be much larger. Secondly, this difference should definitely vary every day, given that the number of tests done, the positive results and the number of people being discharged, is also varying daily.
I tried to ask a question about this at four of the daily press briefings. On April 4, this question was taken up by Raman Gangakhedkar, head of epidemiology and communicable diseases at the Indian Council of Medical Research. He replied, “It is difficult to say off-hand. The number of repeat tests will likely be small. Up until now, 75,000 people have been tested.”
I spoke to other epidemiologists and scientists at Indian Council of Medical Research. A senior scientist who is coordinating the council’s work on Covid-19 confirmed one basic and important detail off the record: The numbers for total samples tested include repeated tests. This means that the number of people tested should be far smaller and that the difference between the two data points should be far larger. And the difference between them should probably not be a stagnant number of 890.
Several documents published by the government list, as we explain below, how testing and repeat-testing is to be done: For anyone to be declared recovered and discharged, they need to be tested repeatedly. As of 9 am on April 5, 266 people had been discharged after being declared recovered and Covid-19-free, according to the government.
A person who has tested positive will need to test negative twice in order to be discharged, according to the government’s “Containment Plan” for Covid-19. These two negative results must come from tests conducted consecutively at a 24-hour interval.
Sometimes, a positive test may come in between, and so the person will have to remain in isolation or in the hospital and be tested again until there are two consecutive negative results. This discharge protocol is listed in at least four documents published by the government – here, here, here and here.
This means that there have already been at least three tests conducted on the 266 people who have been discharged. So of the total 79,500 samples tested in India, at least 798 should be repeat tests.
No accountability?
With all eyes on India – given its vast population and poor health system – data is valuable to understand what is happening right now, but also for researchers to study what happened in India when this crisis has finally passed.
If the government releases proactive and timely data, this will be in public interest.
However, there has been discrepancy between what the Union Health Ministry and Indian Council of Medical Research have been reporting. There was a break of several days when the council stopped putting out information on samples and individuals tested. Now they have restarted publishing these data, but they are only putting out the total number of samples tested and not the number of individuals tested.
The scenario is further complicated because, since last week, the government has been putting curbs on journalists attending the press conferences and also asking questions, restricting it to only certain media houses and reporters. Journalists can only ask questions by posting it on the government’s WhatsApp group for reporters and hope that it gets picked for answering.
At the 30-minute daily briefings, the government is only taking up about four or five questions. Getting the issue of repeat-testing clarified was itself difficult, and with the curbs on the press, it is likely to continue to be difficult to get clarity on this matter. But the question remains open and relevant for anyone crunching the data to bear in mind and try to explain.
This article first appeared on IndiaSpend, a data-driven and public-interest journalism non-profit.
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