State govt to get initial results of 7th sero survey on Monday, detailed report
This will be the Delhi government’s first complete survey after the brutal fourth wave of infections, which saw the city add over 28,000 infections at its peak.
The preliminary results of the seventh round of the serological survey conducted in Delhi last month to estimate the population-level exposure to the Sars-CoV-2 virus (which causes Covid-19) are likely to be submitted to the state government on Monday, according to officials aware of the matter.

“This round of the survey was conducted in great detail, so it will take some time to analyse the data. However, a preliminary report will be submitted on Monday. A more detailed report is likely to be submitted in early November, around Diwali,” said an official from Delhi’s health department who asked not to be named. Diwali this year will be celebrated on November 7.
The complete report will also contain information about vaccine eagerness or hesitancy, which was among the “extensive list of questions” for which data was collected digitally during the survey, said the official.
The government roped in three non-governmental organisations to help collect data during the current survey.
Sero surveys are blood tests that check for antibodies to a virus. They are a good measure of the exposure of a population to the pathogen. They are also a proxy for the level of broad immunity that exists in the population, although the best immunity is that achieved through vaccination.
A portion of the samples collected will also be analysed for neutralising antibodies that specifically target the Sars-CoV-2 virus. This will help researchers correlate the level of IgG antibodies detected in semi-quantitative tests (which just show whether levels of an element are high or low) to the level of neutralising antibodies and thereby estimate the protection that a person has from the coronavirus disease.
This will be the Delhi government’s first complete survey after the brutal fourth wave of infections, which saw the city add over 28,000 infections at its peak.
The last round of the survey in Delhi in April was interrupted due to the emergence of the fourth wave. Just 13,000 samples were collected, instead of the 28,000 targeted.
These samples, however, returned a reading of nearly 56%, which means 56 of every 100 residents of the Union territory were exposed to the virus. The previous five surveys returned readings of 56.13%, 25.5%, 25.1%, 29.1%, and 22.6% respectively.