We know that this pandemic continues to grow and this virus is highly transmissible. And research has shown that only a very small section of the population has acquired any type of immunity against this virus. So, given that a large proportion of the world’s population is still susceptible to this virus, it is going to spread. We have also seen that several countries, which were once witnessing peak infections, have witnessed a rapid decline in the number of cases after implementing strict measures like lockdown and strict physical distancing norms. However, some other countries who made this a voluntary effort witnessed no peak and there was plateau or steady state. In a country like India with huge population, cases will increase and it is going to be a long-term problem, and we thus need to have a long-term strategy to keep it under check. Lockdowns are not long-term solutions. Our strategy should be to prevent our health infrastructure from becoming overburdened. I will also say that situation in India is still under control. India made early intervention and imposed strict lockdown, but with the lifting of the lockdown cases are shooting up. But still cases per million population are low and deaths per million populations are also low when compared to many other countries. Now our main objective is to keep mortality down. That will be possible only when the health infrastructure is not overburdened, because mortality rises when that happens. It is also important that other health services which were put on hold during lockdown like OPD, Cardio care etc should be functional and restart now.