Nepal to offer free COVID-19 tests and treatment as cases surge

Move comes after the top court asked the Communist government to provide free treatment as cases approach 200,000.

A man takes a polymerase chain reaction test for the coronavirus disease in Kathmandu [Navesh Chitrakar/Reuters]

Nepal will provide free COVID-19 tests and treatment for everyone, an aide to the prime minister said on Tuesday, as the total number of infections was set to cross the 200,000 mark.

The move follows a Supreme Court order for free treatment last week after the Communist government asked citizens who could afford to pay to do so, limiting free testing and care to only those who couldn’t.

Surya Thapa, an aide to Prime Minister KP Sharma Oli, said all government hospitals would provide testing and treatment to COVID-19 patients for free.

“Those who want fast services and wish to pay can continue to go to private hospitals,” Thapa told Reuters.

Experts say many COVID-19 patients stayed in isolation at home rather than pay up to 150,000 Nepali rupees ($1,267) in deposits before admission to a hospital.

People wait outside a hospital to be tested for COVID-19 test in Kathmandu [Niranjan Shrestha/AP Photo]

“This also led to fewer people turning up for testing and less contact tracing, causing a rapid increase in infections,” Rabindra Pandey, a public health expert, told Reuters.

Nepal has so far reported 197,024 coronavirus cases and 1,126 deaths, according to government data. There were 2,571 cases and 18 deaths on Monday.

A Reuters tally showed the average number of daily infections was higher than any of Nepal’s regional neighbours except India.

Prime Minister Oli has been criticised for the government’s poor handling of the pandemic and for downplaying the risks initially.

In June, protesters demanding more tests and better COVID care clashed with police, who used water cannon to break up the demonstrations.

Nepal, which has poor health infrastructure, says it has testing facilities for 23,000 samples but, on average, fewer than 15,000 tests are conducted daily.

Source: Reuters