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Tezpur: A health official shows a Covishield vaccine dose, after a consignment of the vaccine arrived from Serum Institute of India, in Tezpur, Friday, (PTI) |
India started inoculating health workers Saturday in what is likely the world’s largest COVID-19 vaccination campaign, joining the ranks of wealthier nations where the effort is already well underway.
India is home to the world’s largest vaccine makers and has
one of the biggest immunization programs. But there is no playbook for the
enormity of the current challenge.
Indian authorities hope to give shots to 300 million people,
roughly the population of the U.S and several times more than its existing
program that targets 26 million infants. The recipients include 30 million
doctors, nurses and other front-line workers, to be followed by 270 million
people who are either over 50 years old or have illnesses that make them
vulnerable to COVID-19.
For workers who have pulled India’s battered healthcare
system through the pandemic, the shots offered confidence that life can start
returning to normal. Many burst with pride.
“I am excited that I am among the first to get the vaccine,”
Gita Devi, a nurse, said as she lifted her left sleeve to receive the shot.
“I am happy to get an India-made vaccine and that we do not
have to depend on others for it,” said Devi, who has treated patients
throughout the pandemic in a hospital in Lucknow, the capital of Uttar Pradesh
state in India’s heartland.
The first dose was administered to a sanitation worker at
the All Indian Institute of Medical Sciences in the capital. New Delhi, after
Prime Minister Narendra Modi kickstarted the campaign with a nationally
televised speech.
“We are launching the world’s biggest vaccination drive and
it shows the world our capability,” Modi said. He implored citizens to keep
their guard up and not to believe any “rumors about the safety of the
vaccines.”
It was not clear whether Modi, 70, had taken the vaccine
himself like other world leaders as an example of the shot’s safety. His
government has said politicians will not be considered priority groups in the
first phase of the rollout.
Health officials haven’t specified what percentage of
India’s nearly 1.4 billion people will be targeted by the campaign. But experts
say it will almost certainly be the largest such drive globally.
The sheer scale has its obstacles. For instance, India plans
to rely heavily on a digital platform to track the shipment and delivery of
vaccines. But public health experts point out that the internet remains patchy
in large parts of the country, with some remote villages entirely unconnected.
Around 100 people were to be vaccinated in each of the 3,006
centers across the country on the first day, the Health Ministry said.
News cameras captured the injections across hundreds of
hospitals, underscoring the pent-up hopes that vaccination was the first step
in getting past the pandemic that has devastated the lives of so many Indians
and bruised the country’s economy.
India on Jan. 4 approved emergency
use of two vaccines, one developed by Oxford University and U.K.-based
drugmaker AstraZeneca, and another by Indian company Bharat Biotech. Cargo
planes flew 16.5 million shots to different Indian cities last week.
But doubts over the effectiveness of the homegrown vaccine
is creating hurdles for the ambitious plan.
Health experts worry that the regulatory shortcut taken to
approve the Bharat Biotech vaccine without waiting for concrete data that would
show its efficacy in preventing illness from the coronavirus could amplify
vaccine hesitancy. At least one state health minister has opposed its use.
In New Delhi, doctors at Ram Manohar Lohia Hospital, one of
the largest in the city, demanded they be administered the AstraZeneca vaccine
instead of the one developed by Bharat Biotech. A doctors union at the hospital
said many of its members were a “bit apprehensive about the lack of complete
trial” for the homegrown vaccine.
“Right now, we don’t have the option to chose between the
vaccines,” said Dr. Nirmalaya Mohapatra, vice president of the hospital’s
Resident Doctors Association.
India’s Health Ministry has bristled at the criticism and
says the vaccines are safe, but maintains that health workers will have no
choice in deciding which vaccine they will get themselves.
According to Dr. S.P. Kalantri, the director of a rural
hospital in Maharashtra, India’s worst-hit state, such an approach was worrying
because he said the regulatory approval was hasty and not backed by science.
“In a hurry to be populist, the government (is) taking
decisions that might not be in the best interest of the common man,” Kalantri
said.
Against the backdrop of the rising global COVID-19 death
toll — it topped 2 million on Friday — the clock is ticking to vaccinate as
many people as possible. But the campaign has been uneven.
In wealthy countries including the United States, Britain,
Israel, Canada and Germany, millions of citizens have already been given some
measure of protection with at least one dose of vaccines developed with
revolutionary speed and quickly authorized for use.
But elsewhere, immunization drives have barely gotten off
the ground. Many experts are predicting another year of loss and hardship in
places like Iran, India, Mexico and Brazil, which together account for about a
quarter of the world’s COVID-19 deaths.
India is second to the U.S. with 10.5 million confirmed
cases, and ranks third in the number of deaths, behind the U.S. and Brazil,
with 152,000.
Over 35 million doses of various COVID-19 vaccines have been
administered around the world, according to the University of Oxford.
While the majority of the COVID-19 vaccine doses have
already been snapped up by wealthy countries, COVAX, a U.N.-backed project to
supply shots to developing parts of the world, has found itself short of
vaccines, money and logistical help.
As a result, the World Health Organization’s chief
scientist, Dr. Soumya Swaminathan, warned this week that it is highly unlikely
that herd immunity — which would require at least 70% of the globe to be
vaccinated — will be achieved this year.
“Even if it happens in a couple of pockets, in a few countries, it’s not going to protect people across the world,” she said.
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