After Rajni Gill infected NCOV, her sister posted on Facebook forgiving plasma to treat.

"I'm looking for a plasma donor who I am hospitalized in Noida. She infected NCOV and this year 43 years old," said Gill's sister, after all calls for doctors, friends and friends

post

Photo: NY Times.

Srinivas B.V., a politician in the capital of New Delhi, India, near the city of Noida where Rajni Gill family live, read the post via Twitter.

Srinivas, as the Youth Union President of the Indian National Party opposite, leading a group of 1,000 people, including 100 people in New Delhi.

"Government and systems have collapsed. I have never witnessed too many people died at the same time. The work I'm doing the same group can just be the sand grain between the desert, but still useful"

Indian Youth Association due to Srinivas B.V.

In the context of the Covid-19 in India, the intense outbreak has never seen, the medical system is "submerged" with about 400,000 new cases and thousands of people died every day, family and friends of NCOV infected people

Some people need medical oxygen, which is now almost impossible to find in New Delhi, a pandemic "hotspot" in India.

Srinivas said the posts for saving on Twitter and Facebook began to spread "like forest fire" from early April 4. So Srinivas created Hashtag #sosiyc so that people could link to Indian Youth Association (IYC

India's Covid-19 online support network is now rated quite loosely, based on tools and techniques commonly used in marketing, together with text messaging forms.

Instead of just stopping with the re-peer of articles, abhishek Murarka, a financial sector in Mumbai, decided to search more with the "verified" phrases, "confirmed" and "available

There are hundreds of miles away, Praveen Mishra, who runs a startup in Bangalore city, watching Murarka's video and applying a separate filter to find hospitals, oxygen and drugs.

"At first I felt extremely scared, that there were too many cases and I couldn't help at all. But now, I'm calling 20 clues every day and verifying their needs", Mishra for

Some people also try to exploit resources around the world.

post

Photo: NY Times.

Jois's group then suggested some Indian companies attached to the list on their apps or websites.

"The most amazing thing of social networks is that you trust strangers," Jois said.

A volunteer of the Indian Youth Association instructs how to use oxygen.

However, in the middle of India, the crisis and travel is limited, the social network is the only way for some people to seek help like Aditya Jain, a New Delhi resident.

Jain's girl was sick about the spine, and he had diabetes and needed to run the kidneys per week.

Through LinkedIn, social networking platforms specialize in job search and recruitment, Jain found an elderly care organization.

Srinivas said he now receives at least 10,000 messages every day on Twitter and checks all them.

Srinivas volunteers collect information from those who need help, then classify them according to the level of risk, then cooperate with local teams to arrange beds and provide plasma for shifts

However, the difficulties that the Indian health system is facing so much that cannot help them all.

Despite that, Chaudhuri still suggested.

For Gill, gynecologist in the city of Noida, the plasma that Srinivas's group was found to save her life.

"I feel choked. In the samsara moment, I was completely released by people who were helping in a way that was not active," Gill said.