
Facial, speech problems among after-effects of mucormycosis post recovery: ICMR study
There was an uptick in cases of mucormycosis, a rare infection also known as 'Black Fungus', during the COVID-19 pandemic.
New Delhi, Jul 12 (PTI) People who suffered from mucormycosis and recovered continue to battle long-term health effects of the fungal infection, such as facial disfigurement and speech difficulty, found an ICMR study.
Critical predictors of poor survival included involvement of the brain or eyes, intensive care admission, poor glycaemic control, and comorbid conditions.
Conversely, patients who received both surgical treatment and combination antifungal therapy (particularly Amphotericin-B formulations with Posaconazole) had significantly higher survival rates, said Dr Rizwan Suliankatchi Abdulkader, from ICMR's National Institute of Epidemiology (NIE), the lead author of the study.
'But survivors often faced disfigurement and psychological distress, with more than 70 per cent reporting at least one clinical sequela (complication or disability) and a substantial proportion experiencing loss of employment,' Rizwan said.
'These are not abstract complications. Facial disfigurement, impaired speech, anxiety, and loss of livelihood are lived realities for many survivors. It is time for India to move beyond life-saving interventions and focus on life-restoring systems of care, including mental health support and rehabilitation,' he said.
Led by Rizwan and the All-India Mucormycosis Consortium, the study assessed survival, treatment outcomes, and post-recovery quality of life among hospitalised patients in India.
This large-scale study, covering 686 patients from 26 tertiary hospitals across the country, is the first of its kind to offer long-term, prospective data on this critical public health concern.
As a part of the study, 686 patients who had contracted mucormycosis between March and July 2021 were followed up for one year. Of the 686, 80 per cent (549) also had COVID-19.
The prevalence of mucormycosis varies significantly, from 0.01 to 2 cases per million in developed countries to 140 cases per million in India and similar nations, with incidence approximately 80 times higher in India. Despite advances in medical care, mucormycosis remains a highly lethal and debilitating condition.
'This study reinforces the pressing need to ensure access to timely diagnosis, surgical interventions, and combination antifungal therapy in all parts of India,' said Dr Manoj Murhekar, Director of Chennai-based ICMR-NIE.
'We cannot overstate how essential high-quality, multidisciplinary care is for patients battling mucormycosis, especially given the irreversible complications they face if treatment is delayed,' said Murhekar, a senior author of the study.
Spanning the length and breadth of India, the study involved institutions from nearly every region, capturing a diverse and realistic picture of mucormycosis management in both urban and rural populations.
Rizwan stressed, 'This is not just a story of numbers. Behind every data point is a person who struggled with pain, disfigurement, and long-term disability. Our duty as clinicians and public health professionals is to reduce not just mortality but also the suffering that comes with survival.
'India has a disproportionately high burden of this disease. Our health systems must be better prepared.' The research comes at a time when India is still grappling with the long-term fallout of the COVID-19 pandemic, during which mucormycosis surged dramatically.
As the global community turns its attention to pandemic preparedness and health system resilience, the study serves as a sobering reminder of the challenges posed by neglected fungal diseases.
'We hope our findings will serve as a call to action for policymakers, hospital administrators, and clinicians. Mucormycosis is not just a complication of COVID-19. It is a disease that demands long-term clinical attention, public health surveillance, and above all, compassion in care,' Rizwan said. PTI PLB SKY SKY
This report is auto-generated from PTI news service. ThePrint holds no responsibility for its content.
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Indian Express
43 minutes ago
- Indian Express
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Less than a month before her wedding, Mumbai-based Vidhya A Thakkar lost her fiancé to a heart attack. It has been nine months since that day and Thakkar finally feels she is beginning to piece her life back together. On this healing journey, she has found an unexpected confidante: ChatGPT. 'There are days when I'm overwhelmed by thoughts I can't share with anyone. I go to ChatGPT and write all about it,' says the 30-year-old book blogger and marketing professional. 'The other day I wrote, 'My head is feeling heavy but my mind is blank,' and ChatGPT empathised with me. It suggested journaling and asked if I wanted a visual cue to calm myself. When I said no to everything, it said, 'We can sit together in silence'.' Hundreds of kilometres away in Chennai, a couple in their late 20s recently had a fight, which got physical. 'Things have been rough between us for a while. But that day, we both crossed a boundary and it shook us,' says Rana*, a content writing professional. 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Initially attending three sessions a week before scaling back to one. At the same time, she also turned to ChatGPT. 'After the engagement was called off in March, I confided in it,' she shares, 'There are things I might take four sessions to tell my therapist but I tell ChatGPT in minutes.' Though she knows her therapist won't judge her, the fear of being judged still lingers. 'Plus, you can't always call your therapist. What if you're emotional at 2 am?' In OpenAI's first podcast in June this year, CEO Sam Altman noted: 'People are having quiet private conversations with ChatGPT now.' He acknowledged the high degree of trust users place in the tool — even though 'AI hallucinates' — and cautioned that 'it should be the tech that you don't trust that much.' Yet, users continue to place considerable trust in such platforms. So much so that, according to therapists, it can sometimes interfere with professional therapy. 'Earlier, Google was a bit of a pain point. Now, it's AI. 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Quoting the Indian Journal of Psychiatry, it also reiterated that India has 0.75 psychiatrists per 100,000 people, whereas the World Health Organization recommends at least three per 100,000. For Rana, the first hurdle was finding a therapist who understood him. 'The good ones usually have a long waiting list. And even if you're already a client, you can't always reach out to your therapist when you're feeling overwhelmed. ChatGPT helps me calm down right then and there,' he says. Rochwani, who has been in therapy for some time, also turned to an AI mental health app called Sonia during a particularly rough patch in his relationship. 'Sometimes, just thinking out loud makes you feel better but you don't always want to speak to a friend,' he explains. Another factor, he adds, is the cost and accessibility of therapy. 'My therapist charges Rs 3,000 for a 45–50 minute session and has a four-month waiting period for new clients.' As people turn more and more to AI, Bhaskar Mukherjee, a psychiatrist with a specialisation in molecular neuroscience, says he has already started seeing relationships forming between humans and AI. Over the past year, he has encountered four or five patients who have developed emotional connections with AI. 'They see the platform or bot as their partner and talk to it after work as they would to a significant other.' He found that three of them, who have high-functioning autism, were also forming relationships with AI. 'I actually encourage them to continue talking to AI — it offers a low-risk way to practise emotional connection and could eventually help them form real relationships,' explains Mukherjee, who practises in Delhi and Kolkata. Most therapists agree that there's no escaping the rise of AI, a reality that comes with its own concerns. In the US, two ongoing lawsuits have been filed by parents whose teenage children interacted with 'therapist' chatbots on the platform — one case involving a teenager who attacked his parents, and another where the interaction was followed by the child's suicide. 'AI can act as a stopgap, filling accessibility and supply gaps, provided it's properly overseen, just like any other therapeutic intervention would be. Mental health professionals and AI developers need to work together to evolve AI tools that are safe and helpful for those who need them most,' says Murgia. (* name changed for privacy)


Time of India
an hour ago
- Time of India
Can I track you, beta? How overprotective parenting is changing childhood
Representative Image In an unsafe world, parents are keeping kids close, but curbs on their movement come at a cost, say experts Like many Mumbaikars who grew up before the turn of the century, Dr Kruti Kachalia recalls walking to school and tuition on her own, sometimes taking an auto. Evenings were spent playing freely in the building compound or the nearby park, with no adult supervision. The eye surgeon wishes her 13-year-old daughter could enjoy the same freedom. But she's too anxious about the 'dangers out there' to let Siya* venture out alone. Until recently, Kachalia would leave her busy practice to escort Siya to evening classes, birthday parties, and playdates. When Siya began insisting on going to badminton class by herself, Kachalia reluctantly agreed — but with several conditions. She booked an Uber auto, tracked her daughter's location, and stayed on the phone with her the entire time. 'My heart was in my mouth when she travelled by auto alone for the first time,' she says. 'The world never feels like a safe place for my daughter to travel alone, but I also wonder whether my fears are preventing me from letting her learn to live in this world.' Kachalia's dilemma echoes that of many millennial parents — caught between wanting to protect their children and the need to give them space to grow. They don't want to hover or stifle their kids, knowing how crucial independence and street smarts are. But the incidents they hear and read about makes it hard to let go. Step into any urban housing complex and you'll see the shift: few children playing outdoors, and those who do are often accompanied by a water-bottle toting nanny or a mom (sometimes a dad) to keep an eye on them. Pune-based child psychiatrist and parent coach Dr Bhooshan Shukla says overprotectiveness is most pronounced among the educated upper middle class. 'The upper middle class thrives on anxiety and want to play safe all the time, so being too careful is pretty much the norm for them,' he says. This trend isn't limited to India. In her piece titled 'Freedom or Safety? Can Kids Have Both?', Annabella Daily — a US-based Finnish mother and journalist — writes that American parents often prioritise protection over independence. Many push back against her Nordic-inspired suggestions of giving kids more space, saying, 'It's just not safe,' even as they agree that independence is essential for children to thrive and learn vital life skills. No gender gap While girl parents have always been careful, parents with boys are becoming cautious too. The recent incident of a female teacher allegedly sexually assaulting a 16-year-old male student at a prominent Mumbai school has added to their fears. Pune mom Nisha Mehta* says her son, who is almost 12, wants to walk to their complex gate to catch his school bus on his own. 'Maybe I will allow him a year later, but definitely not now,' she says. Mehta feels parents have been taking boys' safety too lightly. 'In most school abuse cases one hears of these days, the victim is a little boy. One can't trust male school staff. In fact, the recent incident in Mumbai made me feel that we can't trust even females. We tend to feel that our kids are safest with middle-aged aunty-type teachers, but look at what happened.' Like Kachalia, Mehta too was out and about on her own a lot when she was a teen. She would ride her Scooty to college when she was 16. 'Metros like Mumbai, Pune, Bengaluru and Ahmedabad were considered fairly safe for women and girls unlike parts of the north where ladkiyon ko taadna aur chedna (staring and teasing girls) was commonplace. Unfortunately, the situation has changed, and we can't take chances with our son,' says Mehta. The cost of safety Experts warn that while parents may believe they're keeping their children safe by staying hyper-alert — sometimes quite literally sleeping with one eye open — they may actually be doing more harm than good. Recent studies have linked overprotective parenting to higher risks of anxiety, anger issues, depression, and even reduced life expectancy in children. The latter, according to research by University College London and the Federal University of São Carlos in Brazil, is one of the more alarming long-term effects. In the short term, the most noticeable impact is a lack of confidence in many children. Gurugram mom Radha Banerjee* shares an example: 'My 12-year-old daughter attends a class on the 14th floor of our building. I always go to drop and pick her. But I was busy recently and told her to go on her own, taking my phone with her. She refused. After some cajoling, she went in the lift but stepped out on the next floor when a delivery boy entered the lift.' She adds that the 'stranger-danger' talks they gave when Rini* was a toddler have left her too scared to venture out independently. Parenting researcher Harpreet Grover feels parents are focusing too much on keeping their kids physically safe, but are not as vigilant about their virtual safety. 'A parent today will not let their 10-year-old go down to play by themselves, but they will allow the kid to have a phone and let them be in the room all by themselves. Parents need to worry about what content their child sees online and what they do on social media. They need to make kids spend less time with a screen and promote far more interaction with life.' Grover feels the common fear that accidents and abuse cases are going up is not necessarily correct. 'I don't think there are more cases of abuse and accidents than before; more incidents are being reported now. In fact, physical injuries have reduced as roads are so busy that kids no longer cycle or walk alone on them. I don't remember the last time I saw a child with a plaster. When I was a child, we all would break a bone or two at some point. The broken bones are mendable, but their childhood will not come back. We should let them play.'z Dr Shukla agrees that while parents are doing the right thing by educating their kids about strangers and good/bad touch from a young age, they are forgetting the world inside the house can be dangerous too. 'We must remember that 90% of heinous crimes like sexual assault on children happen in homes at the hands of the closest relatives. So, we must also question our assumptions about trust,' he says. Find a balance Child development experts say a balance can be struck. 'Parents need to understand that if they want their kids to grow, they need to take some risks. There is no situation where there is no risk,' says Shukla. 'We don't need to make our kids play on balcony ledges to make them stronger, but we should not cocoon them either.' Ahmedabad mom Raashi Mittal has been trying to find a middle ground. She allows her 16-year-old daughter to travel to coaching classes by herself in an auto, but not for Navratri garba nights which often last till 3 or 4am. 'She fights with us over this, but our stand is clear. If she wants, she can call her friends for garba where we are going, so we can keep an eye.' Tech to the rescue Some parents are turning to technology to ensure their children's safety when they're alone. Dr Kruti Kachalia recently installed a new tracking app on her daughter's phone that offers live location sharing, an SOS button, and even a feature that lets her listen to the ambient sounds around Siya — just in case. 'Thanks to the app, one day, I heard her having an unpleasant exchange with an auto driver who was fighting for change and not dropping her to the location she asked for. We later talked to her about how she could have dealt with this situation better,' she says. Kachalia is thankful for these tools. 'These can be greatly helpful in allowing teens to become independent. We can't keep them in a bubble.' Mehta has started putting an air tag on her son's T-shirt so she knows where he is. He can now go to the local club for table tennis with friends. The driver drops them till the lobby and then they manage themselves. 'I am taking small steps toward giving him total freedom.' Use controlled exposure Sushant Kalra, founder of the Parwarish Institute of Parenting, says there should be no debate regarding giving freedom to kids. 'Should we send our kids out on their own? The answer is a big yes. Is the situation difficult compared to our times? The answer is yes, again. But that does not change the need to teach children to live on their own. There is no guarantee that we will be alive tomorrow, and the world is not getting any safer, so we have to train our kids to be independent today. ' He believes the only way to prepare is to start early ('Not at 25 which is the age when most parents think their kids are ready to be alone') and to train them well via controlled exposure (to real-life situations). For instance, Kalra allowed his daughter to go to the market which is 300 metres from their Delhi home alone when she was just seven years old. He followed her, hiding behind cars, to ensure her safety without restricting her. His son and daughter, now 25 and 19, also went to their classes by auto on their own from the age of 10. 'I would give them a phone and tell them to call me or their mom the moment they sat in the auto and tell us the auto number in a loud voice, so the driver is aware that the parents have the license number," he says. 'I ensured their safety while also giving them independence. This gave my kids immense confidence.' Kalra also started teaching his kids road safety from the time they were three-four years old. 'I used to tell them that 'I have not held your hand, you have held my hand. I will cross only when you tell me to go.' It made them feel they were in charge and this made them alert.' * Names changed on request


Indian Express
5 hours ago
- Indian Express
Trump's attorney general drops fraud case tied to Covid vaccinations
US Attorney General Pam Bondi on Saturday dropped a case against a Utah doctor accused of falsifying Covid-19 vaccination certificates and destroying more than $28,000 worth of government-provided Covid-19 vaccines. Bondi, in a statement posted on X, said Michael Kirk Moore Jr., of Salt Lake County, Utah did not deserve the jail time he was facing. Moore was indicted by a federal grand jury in 2023 and his trial had begun earlier this month. 'Dr. Moore gave his patients a choice when the federal government refused to do so. He did not deserve the years in prison he was facing. It ends today,' Bondi said. Covid-19 vaccine skeptics have been embraced by the Trump administration. The Pentagon, for example, has sought to re-enlist servicemembers who were ousted for refusing to be vaccinated during the pandemic. Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who for decades has sown doubt about the safety of vaccines contrary to evidence and research by scientists, wrote on X in April: 'Dr. Moore deserves a medal for his courage and his commitment to healing!' According to a 2023 statement from the US Attorney's Office in Utah, Moore allegedly ran the false certifications out of a plastic surgery center. His activities allegedly included administering saline shots to minors, at the request of their parents, so the children would think they were receiving Covid-19 vaccines, the statement said. Marjorie Taylor Greene, a US lawmaker from Georgia and staunch Trump supporter, had championed dropping the case against Moore, who she called a hero in a statement on Saturday. 'We can never again allow our government to turn tyrannical under our watch,' she said in a post on X. The latest move by Bondi comes amid scrutiny of her firings of senior Justice Department officials who worked on investigations into Trump, stoking accusations of political retribution in a department whose mission is to enforce US laws.