Verified By Apollo Pulmonologist March 23, 2023
4420With coronavirus (COVID-19) dominating the news every day, you get to hear a lot about the word, like ‘quarantine’ with an uneasy casualness. But, do you know what this word really means?
Quarantine does not have to be a scary thing. It is an effective way to protect the public. If you are in home quarantine despite being healthy, it is because you have been travelling abroad or have been in close contact with an individual with COVID-19.
Quarantine is a place or state of isolation for an individual or an animal who may have come in contact with contagious diseases. The period of isolation reduces the chance that individual or animal could transfer disease to others.
Quarantine is not reserved just for sick people only. Individuals who appear healthy can actually spread an infection without ever knowing they were carriers. That is why, travellers who look healthy are still quarantined, depending on where they are coming from.
Home Quarantine means to stay at home and avoid contact with anyone, if you have been exposed to, or developed an infectious disease, till the infectious period of the disease is over, or until you come know that you have not contracted a disease to which you were exposed. Quarantine helps in slowing down the spread of infection across a population.
Home quarantine is applicable for inviduals without symptoms of COVID-19 but who have been in contact with a confirmed case. As per the Ministry of Health & Family Welfare (MoHFW), Directorate General of Health Services, Government of India, a contact is defined as following:
The period of home quarantine is for 14 days from contact with a confirmed case or earlier, if a suspect case (of whom the index person is a contact) turns out negative on laboratory testing
Home quarantine means you must reduce contact with other people as much as possible. You do not have to be completely isolated. You must not go to work or school, or do any other activities, and you must not travel on public transport (bus, tram, underground, train, air or ferry).
Home quarantine lasts for 14 days after you have been exposed to infection. If you start coughing, develop a throat infection or fever or experience difficulty breathing, contact the nearest health centre or call: 011-23978046 immediately.
Source: https://www.mohfw.gov.in/DraftGuidelinesforhomequarantine.pdf
Yes. The disease can spread from person to person through small droplets from the nose or mouth which are spread when a person with COVID-19 coughs or exhales. These droplets land on objects and surfaces around the person. People can also catch COVID-19 by touching these objects or surfaces, then touching their eyes, nose or mouth. In addition, people can catch COVID-19 if they breathe in droplets from a person with COVID-19 who coughs out or exhales droplets. This is why it is important to stay more than 1 meter (3 feet) away from a person who is sick.
The airborne route of transmission is under investigation. Of late, this has acquired a ‘superspreader’ status, wherein cases have been implicated through asymptomatic transmission or in some where the mode of transmission is unexplainable.
The content is verified and reviewd by experienced practicing Pulmonologist to ensure that the information provided is current, accurate and above all, patient-focused