In the context of the accelerated spread of the COVID-19 epidemic, what problems does India face?
At present, the global epidemic situation is still not optimistic, and the number of newly diagnosed people in India has exceeded 6, for several days. According to statistics, the cumulative number of confirmed cases has exceeded 2.15 million. Under such an epidemic situation, India faces many difficulties. The first is the Indian slums, where the COVID-19 infection rate is much higher than that outside. Although the survey results released in Mumbai prove that the so-called COVID-19 virus antibody carrying rate in slums is very high, the poor sanitation and high population mobility in slums also make it a region with extremely high infection rate in COVID-19. So although the Indian government says that the epidemic situation in big cities such as Mumbai is not very serious at present, it is hard to say whether big cities will not fall in the future because of the existence of slums. ? Then there is the problem of increasing diagnosis rate in rural India. Because many rural people in India went to work in cities for a living, when the epidemic broke out, India directly blocked the cities, which made many people who came to work unable to return to the countryside. So many people try their best to go back, either by car or on foot. Most of these people obviously did not follow the procedures for testing, which led to the rapid spread of the epidemic that was originally concentrated in cities to rural areas. ? Moreover, there are not enough medical conditions in many rural areas, and there are still problems of being unfriendly to the confirmed patients, which leads many rural people not to do the test. Therefore, it can be said that there is a great risk of outbreak in rural India. The difficult problem facing India is also the critical epidemic situation and resumption of production. Because the city was blocked after the outbreak of the epidemic, many transportation-related industries could not be carried out. Moreover, due to the continuous increase in the number of confirmed cases, the epidemic situation rebounded in many areas after the resumption of work, resulting in many companies in India unable to continue to resume work. ? There are many problems in India under the epidemic, which not only involve people's understanding of the epidemic, the hidden dangers of the outbreak in the surrounding underdeveloped areas, but also the problem of returning to work. Moreover, Modi's government also spent a lot of money to buy arms in such a severe period, resulting in insufficient money to purchase medical supplies and maintain medical services. If the Indian government can't strengthen supervision and face up to a series of problems it is currently facing, it will be very difficult for India's situation to improve.