Business Standard

Supply challenges for auto-disable syringe needle pvt hospitals

- SOHINI DAS & ISHITA AYAN DUTT

Supply challenges for auto-disable (AD) syringes in the private market may derail the vaccinatio­n drive for private hospital networks. After the Centre allowed private hospitals to actively take part in the vaccinatio­n for senior citizens and those above 45 years with comorbidit­ies, the demand for AD syringes has gone up. This round of the national immunisati­on drive has already seen a better turnout and private hospitals are finding it difficult to source AD syringes.

AD 0.5-ml syringes are designed in a way that they cannot pull in more than 0.5 ml. Vaccinator­s have been trained with AD syringes, which is why private hospitals are insisting on this.

“Since this is a vaccine, the dosage should be perfect. The syringe used for inoculatio­n is a specially-designed one, which has a locking mechanism to prevent extraction of more than 0.5 ml of the vaccine. This syringe is provided by a handful of manufactur­ers supplying only to the government. There is a shortage of AD syringes,” said Rupak Barua, group chief executive officer and director, AMRI Hospitals.

So far, the syringes were being supplied by the state government. These would have to be replaced later by the private hospital.

“On Tuesday, we were informed that the government would not be able to supply further and we would have to procure from the market. We are trying to procure from the market, but the availabili­ty is patchy. If it doesn’t improve, then vaccinatio­ns will drop. We now have stock for one to two days and are trying to procure whatever we get from the market,” said Barua.

For front-line and health workers, the syringes were supplied by the government.

Typically, AD syringes are used by the Government of India (GOI) for the national immunisati­on programme and the private vaccine market usually uses disposable syringes. Industry sources revealed the health ministry is of the opinion that private hospitals can continue to use disposable syringes for Covid. In some states where the state government­s can supply AD syringes to hospitals when they buy the vaccine, it will be done.

In Mumbai, for example, hospitals await clarity on whether they can buy the syringes from the civic authoritie­s. Joy Chakrabort­y, chief operating officer of city-based Hinduja Hospital said it has started making enquiries about AD syringes about a week back and has secured some samples. In case these specific syringes are not available, it would await instructio­ns from the epidemiolo­gy cell of the civic body.

Some hospital networks like Manipal Group have decided to use tuberculin syringes (which also help to draw an exact amount of dose) for the Covid-19 vaccinatio­n drive. They are bearing the cost themselves.

Why is there a crisis?

The GOI has placed huge orders for AD syringes with manufactur­ers like Hindustan Syringes & Medical Devices (HMD) who make the Dispovan brand of syringes, and others.

It had placed orders for 230 million syringes earlier, which are to be delivered by April. Now it has placed another order for 350 million syringes, which has to be delivered by September.

Moreover, there is demand from global non-profit organisati­ons like the United Nations Internatio­nal Children's Emergency Fund (UNICEF) for both Covid and routine immunisati­on.

According to a document that the manufactur­ers have shared with the government, India roughly has an annual capacity to make 1.08-billion 0.5-ml AD syringes per annum between key players HMD (720 million), Iscon Surgicals (180 million), and Becton, Dickinson and Company (180 million). The three manufactur­ers are planning to increase this to 1.42 billion (HMD up to 1 billion; Iscon will ramp up to 240 million) by mid-2021.

Rajiv Nath, chairman and managing director of HMD, said it has already ramped up capacities to 800 million pieces per annum and will take it up to 1.2 billion syringes per annum by the April-june quarter of 2021-22.

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