How far will the epidemic in India go? Is the severity overestimated?

This is a difficult question to predict! Humanly speaking, we certainly hope that the Indian epidemic will get better soon, but I'm afraid that hope can only be hope.

At the beginning of the epidemic, there were many international experts who feared that once the epidemic broke out in India, it would be very difficult to control. The rationale was that India's large population, poor medical equipment, low quality of personnel, serious state of unorganized and undisciplined anarchy, coupled with overwhelming domestic unrest, would all push India to the peak of the epidemic and eventually bear the bitter fruit of lamentation!

But what is so snotty and funny is that instead of going in the direction predicted by the experts, India is gradually moving towards the betterment of the epidemic amidst the fears of the people!

But it's all a sham, and we won't say that the Indian government is withholding and concealing information, but because of the chaos within India, and the ineffective control of the epidemic, it's all laying the groundwork for another outbreak in India!

Perhaps the initial virus was not strong enough to infect Indians, but the virus that mutated again and again, I'm afraid, will not be so caring for Indians anymore!

Now from all indications, I'm afraid the epidemic in India won't end anytime soon, not even at its peak! Of course, this is not what we want to see, much less what we hope for, but we commoners can only pray for them, and only have the ability to pray!

The Indian epidemic is not overestimated, it's much worse. My friend is doing business in the city of Mumbai, India, and three out of a family of four have been infected with New Crown Pneumonia. According to my friend, the city of Mumbai is the richest city in India and a very densely populated area, and because it is also an important trading and port city with high population movement, the epidemic is also the most serious, and the state in which it is located is also the area with the worst impression of the epidemic.

My friend said the ban on movement of people has been in force in her area since half a month. She, her husband and their eldest daughter have been infected, but the nearby hospitals are overcrowded and the smaller ones have no capacity to treat them, so the family is now stuck at home.

Because the epidemic is so severe, the family can't get out, can't go back to their home country, and it's not practical to go to a third-party country for fear of having an accident in the middle of the journey. The key is that you can't go anywhere when you're sick.

Originally, her family had stocked up on protective materials last year on the advice of friends at home, but recently her family and employees have been consuming so much that they are running out of money.

The place she rented was next to a rich neighborhood, and basically more than half of it had fled. She is now desperate and regrets that she didn't leave her business last year and return to her home country, and she is most worried about her two children, fearing that they won't be able to withstand it.

She doesn't see a glimmer of hope in the local anti-epidemic measures. All she can do now is hope that the medical supplies sent to her from China a few days ago will reach her sooner.