The notorious smog over the Delhi-National Capital Region (NCR) is now translating into a severe public health crisis, with a new survey revealing that three in four households in the area currently have at least one sick member. The findings, released by the community platform LocalCircles, point to a dangerous collision between highly toxic air and seasonal viral infections.
The survey, which collected over 15,000 responses from residents across Delhi, Gurugram, Noida, Faridabad, and Ghaziabad, shows a drastic rise in illness over the last month. In late September, 56% of households reported a sick member; that figure has now surged to 75%.
Doctors in the capital confirm a steady increase in cases of H3N2 influenza and other viral infections. Residents are reporting prolonged symptoms, including persistent fever, cough, sore throat, and fatigue, with recovery times often stretching beyond ten days.
The LocalCircles report notes that the current wave of illness is disproportionately impacting vulnerable groups. “The virus is affecting children, the elderly, and those with pre-existing conditions the most,” the report states, detailing widespread prolonged fever, body aches, and respiratory distress.
Air Pollution Compounds Viral Spread
The health crisis coincides with a deadly return of air pollution. The Air Quality Index (AQI) has recently been fluctuating between 400 and 500, fueled by firecracker smoke, farm fires in neighboring states, and local emissions. Fine particulate matter (PM2.5) levels have reportedly reached 350 $\mu g/m^3$, nearly ten times the safe limit prescribed by the World Health Organization.
The survey found that the health symptoms directly align with pollution exposure, with three in four households also reporting breathing issues, cough, sore throat, nasal congestion, burning eyes, and headaches.
“Delhi’s residents are facing a double whammy,” the report highlights. “Seasonal viral infections have coincided with dangerously high pollution, making recovery harder and increasing vulnerability to respiratory illness.”
The analysis of household sickness revealed the severity of the problem: only 25% of households reported everyone being healthy, while 17% had four or more unwell individuals.
The survey researchers have urged authorities to take immediate interventions to address the root causes of air pollution and implement a coordinated public health response. “The need of the hour is not just cleaner air, but a coordinated public health response,” the report concludes, as families struggle with an illness that blurs the line between a respiratory infection and pollution-related distress.
