The Capital Delhi reported the lowest number of COVID patients being hospitalised in the last two months. IN a comparative study, it shows that is over 10 times lesser to the peak of single-day hospital admissions recorded towards the end of April. At 182, single-day COVID hospital admissions were the lowest on Monday compared to 294 on April 1 during the ascension of the second wave in the city.
According to Delhi government records, 44 COVID patients were admitted to hospitals and 34 discharged every hour during the 61-day upsurge of the second COVID wave. Officials said the second wave seems to be at an end.
Between April 1 and May 31, a total number of 65,762 patients or 1,078 per day were admitted to city hospitals while 51,004 or 836 per day, were discharged, according to the records. As the second wave got more virulent on a daily basis, it had peaked at 1993 admissions on a single day on April 29 when the total number of hospital beds in the city stood at 21,152.
After a slight increase on May 25, with 388 admissions compared to 382 on May 24, the number of hospitalisations has been consistently going down for the last 4 days. These stood at 229 on May 28, 228 on May 29, 237 on May 30 and 182 on May 31.
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