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Coronavirus – Health and Governance Issues

Digital surveillance for Covid could do more harm than good

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Epidemic Diseases Act-1897

Mains level: Paper 2- Privacy and use of technology to tackle the pandemic.

Two issues are examined in detail in this article. The first is about the lack of legal framework in India. And the second which is related to the first is the deployment of technology and its benefit and issues it raises. The nature of private-friendly technology to track the disease is also elaborated.

Disease surveillance and individual rights

  • Concerns about the impact of disease surveillance on individual rights—including privacy—are not new.
  • Globally, previous epidemics have led to an increasing acceptance that public health initiatives must also respect freedom and privacy to the greatest extent possible.
  • Lessons from history and other jurisdictions show that a rights-friendly response to the pandemic is possible and must be strived for.
  • Canada amended its Quarantine Act in 2005 to give legislative powers to powers state may exercise and also placed some limits on these powers.
  • Similarly, in 2015, South Korea also amended the Infectious Diseases Control and Prevention Act, 2009, giving power to state as well as an individual.
  • In 2017, the World Health Organization (WHO) published its guidelines on “Ethical Issues in Public Health Surveillance” (WHO 2017).
  • These guidelines require states to ensure that there is no unauthorised access or disclosure of information collected.
  • It also requires states to take stock of how much data is rightfully required by various agencies of the government before access is granted.
  •  However, India does not appear to have factored this into its response to the COVID-19 pandemic.
  • Rather, what we are witnessing is a push to develop and adopt ad hoc technology-based solutions without a clear understanding of their limitations and harms.

How the absence of legal framework could be problematic?

  •  During an epidemic (or a pandemic), state agencies may act in a way that significantly impacts people’s fundamental rights to liberty, free movement, and privacy.
  • Authorities may have to compel individuals to undergo testing, mandatory isolation and/or enforce quarantine measures, and trace all of their interactions in case they test positive for the infection.
  • With such grave implications for civil liberties, a legal framework is essential to bring certainty and accountability to government functioning.
  • It will have checks and balances in place and will state the rights and remedies of those affected by the wrongful exercise of powers.
  • A 2015 report by WHO’s International Health Regulations has highlighted this fact.
  • International Health Regulations are currently the only global regulations on public health, which are binding on India.

Let’s look into this WHO’s report

  •  WHO’s International Health Regulations-2015 observed the absence of appropriate legislation that would enable the Indian government to mobilise its different wings in the case of an imminent outbreak (WHO 2015).
  • The report noted that this legal gap is exacerbated when coordination is required with states.
  • This is presumably because health is a domain over which states have exclusive powers.
  • The report also noted that India lacks a standard operating procedure (SOP) to clarify when existing legislative provisions could be invoked, and who could be directed to respond to the outbreak.
  • However, in nearly five years since this report was published, there is still no sign of a legal regime to describe the powers of the state and its functions during such times.

Acts used in India to control pandemic and issues with them

  • In the absence of such an SOP, states in India have resorted to invoking the Epidemic Diseases Act, 1897.
  • This act is pre-independence legislation that confers extremely wide powers on states without any procedural safeguards.
  • In order to exercise powers under this statute, most states have framed regulations under it, conferring upon themselves the power to impose and enforce quarantine and to collect vast amounts of personal information.
  • These regulations are vaguely worded and contain no limitations or safeguards.
  • Similarly, on 24 March 2020, the central government invoked the Disaster Management Act, 2005, which allowed it to issue binding guidelines to states.
  • [The central government’s entire response to COVID-19 has been through these guidelines, including its imposition of a strict nationwide lockdown for over two months.
  • The result has been the issuance of top-down orders,  even though much of the economic and infrastructural burden has fallen directly on state governments.

Adoption of technology and issues with it

  • There has been the alarming increase in the adoption of digital technology, with the supposed objective of overcoming existing infrastructural gaps.
  • India spends approximately 1.28% of its GDP on health.
  • Such technologies are often rolled out with neither understanding their limitations, nor properly examining their potential to harm.
  • More worryingly, an over-reliance on technology also makes the state complacent.
  • Technological interventions tend to become the default, replacing efforts to understand and address the underlying causes of the problem.

Arogya Setu and other digital interventions in India

  • Arogya Setu is a contact-tracing application.
  • States have also taken to widespread deployment of drones in several cities to enforce quarantine measures as well as the lockdown itself.
  • More recently, BECIL, a public sector undertaking, issued expressions of interest to invite bids for a “personnel tracking GPS solution” as well as a “COVID-19 patient tracking tool”
  • The first envisages a wearable device to track health workers’ location and to store the data on a  centralised government server.
  • The second proposes the collation of information from government databases and from telecom and internet data to identify “locations, associations and behaviour” of patients/persons suspected of being infected.
  • However, evidence suggests that these interventions may only end up ramping up surveillance without achieving any of their stated objectives.

Limitations of digital surveillance and possible harm

  • Such apps are inherently limited:
  • 1) Their success depends on self-reporting by confirmed infectious persons, which in turn depends on large-scale testing.
  • Given India’s abysmally low testing rate, self-reporting too will predictably below.
  • 2)In view of India’s low smartphone penetration, it is likely that the app will be ineffective for a large part of the population.
  • 3)Such apps assess risk based on Bluetooth signals, which may result in false positives as the signals are capable of transmitting across walls or ceilings,  therefore alerting people in adjoining houses or cars, even in the absence of physical contact.
  • In addition to these limitations, such technological tools also vastly expand the government’s surveillance architecture.

Issues with Aarogya Setu and use of Drones

  • Aarogya Setu collects a large amount of personal information from users when they sign up, and constantly builds on this by collecting location and Bluetooth data in real-time.
  • This allows the app to create a social graph of a person’s interactions.
  • Neither the app nor the Data Access and Knowledge Sharing Protocol—which was subsequently issued—provide for a fixed period of time after which the collected data will be destroyed.
  • The protocol also reveals that the app’s functionality is not limited to contact tracing, but that the data gathered through it will be used to inform government decision making on almost all aspects related to COVID-19.
  • The government recently relied on the data generated by the app to identify new hotspots.
  • But the inherent limitations of the app referred to above make these decisions highly suspect.
  • This is in addition to some states in India promoting their own applications for contact tracing and geofencing, which raise similar concerns.
  • The use of hired drones by the police for surveillance also raises several concerns.
  • These drones are being deployed without any legal basis or transparency on how the recorded footage will be used or retained.
  • A number of troubling scenarios are possible—the data may be used to surveil and target specific locations or communities that are already subjected to discrimination and harassment.
  • It may also be retained and used later for purposes unrelated to disease surveillance.
  • Reports suggest that this data is already being shared freely amongst various entities of the government without people’s knowledge or consent.

Way forward

  • No doubt, public health interests may require some restrictions to the right to privacy—as was expressly recognised by the court itself.
  • However, any restriction must necessarily pursue a legitimate aim, be based in law, and be a necessary and proportionate means to achieve said aim.
  • This means that the state must first identify the goals it seeks to achieve rather than first creating surveillance mechanisms and then continuously shifting the goalposts.
  • If multiple ways exist to achieve an objective, the state is obliged to adopt the least restrictive one.
  • The legal regime for public health, such as in Canada and South Korea, is therefore essential to ensure that public safety is not used as an excuse to unnecessarily restrict constitutionally guaranteed freedoms.
  • The state needs to be transparent about the digital tools it adopts, which would only go towards increasing public trust and ensure better adoption of the technology.
  • Individuals should be informed if their information has been collected and used by the government for surveillance or research purposes, giving them an opportunity to challenge the government’s acts if they feel such powers are wrongly exercised.
  • If surveillance is legitimately warranted to deal with a public health emergency, then it must be subject to a sunset clause.
  • Data that is no longer required must be deleted.
  • And clear protocols need to be created to determine who can access the data in case it has to be retained for research or medical purposes.

Consider the question “A pandemic admittedly requires the extensive gathering of data and surveillance to understand disease trends, infrastructural constraints, and to frame prevention and mitigation strategies. Howerver, the technology adopted to achieve this aim must be privacy-friendly. Comment.

Conclusion

Our past experiences can and should inform our decision on the similar deployment of surveillance technology for public health. Such technology must not be excessively invasive and should always have the legal framework which could help the citizens challenge its applications in a given situation.

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Coronavirus – Health and Governance Issues

Tracking the epidemic

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: PCR Corona test

Mains level: Paper 2- Decentralisation of governance.

This article suggests the innovative indicators for the classification of areas. Also, the need for decentralisation of science and governance is stressed. So, how could decentralisation help? What should form the basis of indicators at the local level? Such questions are answered in this article.

States are better placed to deliver on public health

  • They are, of course, better placed to deliver on public health and welfare. They are also generally more accountable.
  • According to the recent ICMR serological sample study conducted in mid-May, barely 1 per cent of non-metropolitan India was infected.
  • Thus, as the infection spreads and eventually stabilises, there is a lot of heavy lifting that the states must do.

The measure of prevention and containment zone

  • After lockdown,  the message of prevention and the device called containment zones are the only ways left to manage the epidemic.
  • This includes allied activities: The demarcation of the boundary, testing, treatment, tracing and quarantine.
  • Hidden inside this box of practices are the answers to questions such as: Why is Karnataka doing better than Maharashtra in terms of mortality?

What went wrong with colour-coded zones at district levels?

  • The older colour-coded zone label, introduced by the Centre on April 14, was at the district scale.
  • That quickly became a collective punishment with little measurable benefits.
  • One consequence was that districts were unhappy with the return of migrants simply because that could change their colour.
  • The second problem was that the red-ness of a region was equated with the need for lockdowns, since that was the only visible instrument.

Let’s explore the ward and community level base strategy

  • Well designed metrics at the ward and community scale will help the science develop.
  • They can guide the people and the administration and allow the states to compare practices and learn from each other.

Let us see what can be achieved within this framework: Focusing on measurement

1. Classified should include socio-economic and demographic factors

  • Any area classification must include key socio-economic and demographic determinants, for example, the density of the area, number of people in dwellings with one room or less, or the fraction of people using community toilets.
  • As we know, much of the infection is spreading within dense clusters.
  • Such metrics would indicate vulnerable areas and the limits to reduction in contact rate through policing.
  • Here, decongestion measures such as out-migration may be required.
  • This will also serve as a guide to the future of the locality or ward.

2. Designing indicator from data collected so far

  • An important document is the Specimen Referral Form (SRF) designed by the ICMR which must be filled to undertake the PCR Corona Test.
  •  In that, the possible patient backgrounds for recommending the test, are recorded.
  •  In that, symptomatic cases with no known contact are already a large fraction of those infected.
  • This and other fields in the SRF such as age, location and symptoms, would give us substantial insights into the dynamics and severity of the disease and the efficacy of our procedures.
  • This data should be made available immediately.

3. Measuring the risk from migrants

  • The recent inclusion of migrants in the SRF is indeed welcome.
  • This, coupled with other quarantine data in the SRF, gives us the risk from migrants to the community at large.
  • Also welcome is the setting up of a National Migrant Information System (NMIS) on the NDMA database.
  • Hopefully, we may now know the fraction of migrants who have safely reached home and the state-wise status of those who haven’t and the reasons for the same.
  • In any case, the number of infected migrants, if suitably quarantined, must be subtracted from the total number of positive cases for that area/district, for they did not arise there and they are outside the infective load in the area.
  • This will help reduce the stigma on migrants and instead put more focus on quarantine arrangements for them.

4. Measuring preparedness

  • Ensuring that our villages and towns are prepared to meet the disease is an important objective.
  • One metric to measure preparedness is the number of beds, doctors and ambulances per 1,000.
  • This may then be compared with the active cases in the region.
  • In fact, the adverse mortality in some areas is directly correlated with the local shortage of medical care.
  • For most districts in Maharashtra, shortages would start biting at about 200 cases per day.
  • An important addition would be village-level data on the running of the local quarantine, the functioning of the PDS and availability of drinking water.

5. Measuring the prevalence and social distance

  • Coming to prevention, the importance of masks, distance and open ventilation is still not appreciated.
  • A simple statistical metric is to measure the prevalence of masks in an area.
  • This can be done by installing cameras in suitable locations and counting people with masks.
  • Social distance measures are also amenable to indicators.
  • For example, the fraction of buses which have installed a sheet between the driver and the passengers, or recording innovative ways of ticket vending.

The popularity of the colour-coding based on such indicators may be effective in social mobilisation.

Social comprehension and local solution

  • Mitigation and adaptation require social comprehension and local solutions.
  • These need scientific studies by regional institutions and partnerships with civil society.
  • Creating and supporting good metrics and providing data is an important step in that direction.
  • This will not only save lives, it will reduce fear and help re-start normal life.

Decentralisation of science and governance

  • The epidemic has underlined that publicness and decentralisation of science and governance is the only way of creating knowledge and the professional ability to solve our own problems.
  • Without this, the post-corona Indian society would be an unhappy attempt at making the old arrangement work in a degraded reality of fearful and angry people.

Consider the question “Corona pandemic and subsequent measures to contain it has highlighted the need for decentralisation of governance. Elaborate.”

Conclusion

We must learn to live with the virus, but we must also find joy. Only through constant engagement and adaptation will we overcome fear and forge a new society that will sustain both life and happiness.

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Higher Education – RUSA, NIRF, HEFA, etc.

MOOC can’t be the substitute for learning in the classroom

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: MOOC

Mains level: Paper 2- Adoption of MOOC and issues with it.

Massive open online courses (MOOC) could not be panacea for the problems education faces. It can’t be the replacement for the learning in the classrooms. This article highlights the issues with adoption of MOOC and why it can’t be the replacement for learning in the classrooms.

UGC circular to adopt MOOC

  • In the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, the University Grants Commission had issued a circular to universities.
  • Through this circular, it encouraged them to adopt massive open online courses (MOOCs) offered on its SWAYAM platform for credit transfers in the coming semesters.
  • But the move poses a great danger.
  • But why it’s danger? Because it is also being seen as an instrument to achieve the country’s target Gross Enrolment Ratio (GER) in higher education.
  • GER in higher education is envisioned to be 30% by 2021; it was 25.8% in 2017–18.

Issues with MOOC and what classrooms offers

  • MOOC-based e-learning platforms tend to reinforce a top-down teacher-to-student directionality of learning.
  • This misses the point that teaching and learning are skills that are always in the making.
  • The teacher is after all “an intellectual midwife” who facilitates in the birth of students’ ideas and insights through engaging in critical dialogue.
  • In a conducive classroom environment, this role is often switched and the student plays intellectual midwife to the teacher’s ideas.
  • Moving to a MOOC-based degree system would rob young teachers and students of these essential lessons in teaching and learning from each other.
  • Policymakers behind the SWAYAM platform have left out courses in engineering, medicine, dental, pharmacy, nursing, architecture, agriculture, and physiotherapy on the grounds that they involve laboratory and practical work.
  • This move makes sense.
  • But it seems to suggest that the pure sciences, the arts, the social sciences, and humanities curricula are largely lecture- and theory-based, and, therefore, readily adaptable to the online platform.
  • Nothing can be farther from such a misconception.
  • Implicit in every curriculum is the tacit assumption that the classroom is a laboratory for hands-on testing of ideas, opinions, interpretations, and counterarguments.
  • A diverse and inclusive classroom is the best litmus test for any theory or insight.
  • Multidisciplinarity happens more through serendipity — when learners across disciplines bump into each other and engage in conversations.
  • Classroom and campus spaces offer the potential for solidarity in the face of discrimination, social anxiety, and stage fear, paving the way for a proliferation of voluntary associations that lie outside the realm of family, economy, and state.
  • In the absence of this physical space, teaching and learning would give way to mere content and its consumption.
  • Without a shared space to discuss and contest ideas, learning dilutes to just gathering more information.
  • This could also dilute norms of evaluation, whereby a “good lecture” might mean merely a lecture which “streams seamlessly, without buffering”. 

Online mode: add more value to the classroom education

  • One could think of greater value-sensitive and socially just architectures and technologies that further foster classroom engagement.
  • It also makes it accessible for students of various disabilities and challenges, thereby adding more value to the existing meaning of education.
  • But public education modelled on social distancing is a functional reduction and dilution of the meaning of education.
  • It could add value only as an addendum to the classroom. 

Consider the question “Examine the issues with wide adoption of the MOOC to address the problems education  sector in India faces.”

Conclusion

Such platforms must be seen only as stop-gap variants that help us get by under lockdown situations and complement classroom lectures.

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Oil and Gas Sector – HELP, Open Acreage Policy, etc.

How fuel price decontrol works — or why consumers always lose out

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Sweet and Sour grade crude oil

Mains level: Fuel prices hike and their impact

India fuel prices are somewhat stagnant these days despite spikes in global crude oil prices. The key beneficiary in this subversion of price decontrol is the government. The consumer is a clear loser, alongside fuel retailing companies as well. Let’s see how.

Do you know?

Grade of crude oil processed in Indian refineries:  ‘Sour grade’ (Oman and Dubai average) and ‘Sweet grade’ (Brent)

Oil and India

  • In theory, retail prices of petrol and diesel in India are linked to global crude prices.
  • There is supposed to be complete decontrol of consumer-end prices of auto fuels and others such as the aviation turbine fuel or ATF.
  • It means that if crude prices fall, as has largely been the trend since February, retails prices should come down too, and vice versa.

So, why is there a divergence in the trends?

  • Oil price decontrol is a one-way street in India — when global prices go up, this is passed on to the consumer, who has to cough up more for every litre of fuel consumed.
  • But when the reverse happens and prices go down, the government — almost by default — slaps fresh taxes and levies to ensure that it rakes in extra revenues, even as the consumer, who should have ideally benefited by way of lower pump prices.

How does decontrol work?

  • Price decontrol essentially offers fuel retailers such as Indian Oil, HPCL or BPCL the freedom to fix prices of petrol or diesel based on calculations of their own cost and profits.
  • Fuel price decontrol has been a step-by-step exercise, with the government freeing up prices of ATF in 2002, petrol in the year 2010 and diesel in October 2014.
  • Prior to that, the Government used to intervene in fixing the price at which the fuel retailers used to sell diesel or petrol.
  • While fuels such as domestic LPG and kerosene still are under price control, for other fuels such as petrol, diesel or ATF, the price is supposed to be reflective of the price movements of the so-called Indian basket of crude oil.

Are India’s taxes on fuels high? Obviously, Yes!

  • On May 5, the Centre announced one of the steepest ever hikes in excise duty by Rs 13 per litre on diesel and Rs 10 per litre on petrol, following up on another round of sharp hikes in the first week of March.
  • All of this effectively cements India’s position as the country with among the highest taxes on fuel.
  • Prior to the increase in excise duty (in February 2020), the government, centre plus states was collecting around 107 per cent taxes, (Excise Duty and VAT) on the base price of petrol and 69 per cent in the case of diesel.
  • With the second revision in excise duty in May, the government is collecting around 260 per cent taxes, (Excise Duty and VAT) on the base price of petrol and 256 per cent in the case of diesel (as on 6th May 2020), according to estimates by CARE Ratings.
  • In comparison, taxes on fuels as a percentage of pump prices was around 65 per cent of the retail price in Germany and Italy, 62 per cent in the UK, 45 per cent in Japan and under 20 per cent in the US.

Do OMCs also benefit?

  • The only entity that benefits at the consumer’s expense is the government — in fact, both the Central and state governments.
  • OMCs, interestingly, are also among the losers from the sharp downward gyrations in oil prices.
  • The problem for companies such as IOC or BPCL is that a continuous slide in fuel prices leads to the prospect of inventory losses.
  • It is a technical term for the losses incurred when crude oil prices start falling and companies that have sourced the oil at higher prices discover that the prices have tumbled by the time the product reaches the refinery.
  • Including both crude oil and products, companies such as IOC keep an inventory of about 20-50 days.

Also read:

[Burning Issue] Oil Prices and OPEC+

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Higher Education – RUSA, NIRF, HEFA, etc.

Sahakar Mitra Scheme

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Sahakar Mitra Scheme

Mains level: Not Much

The Union Ministry for Agriculture has launched Sahakar Mitra: Scheme on Internship Programme (SIP).

Note: Article 19 states that the Right to form co-operative societies is a Fundamental Right and DPSP Article 43-B provides for the promotion of co-operative societies.

Sahakar Mitra Scheme

  • The scheme is an initiative by the National Cooperative Development Corporation (NCDC), the cooperative sector development finance organization.
  • It aims to help cooperative institutions access innovative ideas of young professionals while the interns will gain experience of working in the field to be self-reliant.
  • The scheme is expected to assist cooperative institutions to access new and innovative ideas of young professionals while the interns gain experience of working in the field giving the confidence to be self-reliant.
  • Professional graduates in disciplines such as Agriculture and allied areas, IT etc. will be eligible for an internship.
  • Professionals who are pursuing or have completed their MBA degrees in Agri-business, Cooperation, Finance, International Trade, Forestry, Rural Development, Project Management etc. will also be eligible.
  • Each intern will get financial support over a 4 months internship period.

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Urban Floods

I-FLOWS: Mumbai Flood Management System

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: IFLOWS

Mains level: Urban floods in India

Integrated Flood Warning System for Mumbai (I-FLOWS Mumbai), a state-of-the-art flood warning system has been developed for the city.

Practice question for mains:

Q. Urban floods in India are consequences of unplanned urbanization in India. Discuss with references to the frequent annual floods in Mumbai.

What is IFLOWS-Mumbai?

  • IFLOWS is a monitoring and flood warning system that will be able to relay alerts of possible flood-prone areas anywhere between six to 72 hours in advance.
  • The Ministry of Earth Sciences (MoES) has developed the system with in-house expertise and coordination with the Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC).
  • The system can provide all information regarding possible flood-prone areas, likely height the floodwater could attain location-wise problem areas across all 24 wards and calculate the vulnerability and risk of elements exposed to flood.
  • Mumbai is only the second city in the country after Chennai to get this system. Similar systems are being developed for Bengaluru and Kolkata.

How will it work?

  • The primary source for the system is the amount of rainfall, but with Mumbai being a coastal city, the system also factors in tidal waves and storm tides for its flood assessments.
  • The system has provisions to capture the urban drainage within the city and predict the areas of flooding.
  • The system comprises seven modules- Data Assimilation, Flood, Inundation, Vulnerability, Risk, Dissemination Module and Decision Support System.

Why was this system needed in Mumbai?

  • Mumbai, the financial capital of India, has been experiencing floods with increased periodicity.
  • Floods, especially the ones in 2005 and 2017, are etched in everyone’s memory.
  • Last year, post-monsoon and unseasonal rainfall as late as October, two tropical cyclones in the Arabian Sea had caught authorities off guard and left a trail of destruction.
  • The flood during 26th July 2005, when the city received a rainfall of 94 cm, a 100 year high in a span of 24 hours had paralyzed the city completely.
  • Urban flooding is common in the city from June to September, resulting in the crippling of traffic, railways and airlines.
  • As preparedness for floods before they occur, the system will help in warning the citizens so that they can be prepared in advance for flooding conditions.

Benefits

  • IFLOWS-Mumbai will enhance the resilience of the city by providing early warning for flooding, especially during high rainfall events and cyclones.
  • Using this, it will be possible to have an estimate of the flood inundation three days in advance, along with immediate weather updates.
  • The Union Minister said the system was “one of the most advanced” ones and will help the city, which has been experiencing floods with increasing periodicity.
  • The hi-tech system will predict floods before they occur, therefore enabling Mumbaikars to take due precautions in advance.

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Food Safety Standards – FSSAI, food fortification, etc.

FSSAI Food Safety Index for 2019-20

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: FSSAI, Food Safety Index

Mains level: Food safety initiaitives in India

The Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI) has recently released its Food Safety report for 2019-20.

Food safety has been in news this year quite frequent. Do make a note of following – Recommended Dietary Allowance (RDA), Red Octagon, Eat Right Movement, Food Safety Mitra etc.

The Food Safety Index

  • The index ranks states on five parameters of food safety: human resources and institutional data, compliance, food testing facility, training and capacity building besides consumer empowerment.
  • This is the second index on food safety, which FSSAI released on the occasion of World Food Safety Day with the theme “Food Safety is everyone’s business”.
  • It was dedicated to those in the supply chain who have ensured the uninterrupted availability of safe food during this COVID-19 pandemic.

Highlights of the report

  • Gujarat, Tamil Nadu and Maharashtra have topped an index that ranked states ensuring food safety in 2019-20.
  • Among the smaller states, Goa came first followed by Manipur and Meghalaya.
  • Among UTs, Chandigarh, Delhi and the Andaman Islands secured top ranks.

Back2Basics: Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI)

  • The FSSAI is an autonomous body established under the Ministry of Health & Family Welfare, Government of India.
  • It has been established under the Food Safety and Standards Act, 2006 which is a consolidating statute related to food safety and regulation in India.
  • It is responsible for protecting and promoting public health through the regulation and supervision of food safety.
  • It is headed by a non-executive Chairperson, appointed by the Central Government, either holding or has held the position of not below the rank of Secretary to the Government of India.

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