Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

A vaccine will be found. Plan for its delivery

Monitor research; practise emergency responses; draw up priority lists; and leverage India’s production capacity

- SIDHARTH RUPANI Sidharth Rupani is a consultant specialisi­ng in the design of public health supply chains The views expressed are personal

Most experts say we are 12-18 months away from an approved coronaviru­s disease (Covid-19) vaccine, and even longer from having one available at scale. Despite vaccine developmen­t being at this uncertain early stage, India must immediatel­y start planning how to deliver a Covid-19 vaccine.

When a vaccine becomes available, every onwill have to run the fastest and largest mass vaccinatio­n campaign in history. India will have to vaccinate about a billion people to reach the level believed to confer herd immunity for Covid-19. Each day of the virusdrive­n uncertaint­y cripples the economy and imposes immense human costs. India should do everything we can to save a few critical days, weeks or months.

A task force on coronaviru­s vaccine developmen­t, drug discovery, diagnosis, and testing exists. This group’s focus is diffuse. Even in the area of vaccines, the group’s focus is primarily vaccine developmen­t, not the delivery. Immunising a billion people in a country as diverse as India will be a staggering operationa­l challenge. To be successful, we need a powerful group to plan for vaccine delivery now.

To pull this off, India can draw lessons from two large, successful campaign-style exercises. Every five years, India holds the world’s largest general election, involving up to 900 million voters. Electoral rules state there must be a polling place within two kilometres of every habitation. India employs 11 million election workers to make sure every eligible Indian can vote. Every vote is cast electronic­ally via more than 1.7 million machines. Despite these formidable challenges, India successful­ly conducts elections, widely considered free and fair.

The polio campaign is the second example. As recently as 2009, India had over 60% of all global polio cases. With an annual birth cohort of 27 million children, high population density, poor sanitation, inaccessib­le regions, high population mobility and a high disease burden, the obstacles to achieving zero-polio status seemed insurmount­able. Neverthele­ss, India has not had a single case of the wild poliovirus since 2011, and it was officially declared polio-free in 2014. The victory was achieved through government ownership, partnershi­ps with private and social sectors, innovation­s in programme delivery, technical advances, and massive social mobilisati­on.

There are over 90 vaccine candidates in trials, six in human clinical trials, with more being added every week. The vaccine candidates range across virus, viral vector, nucleic acid, and protein-based approaches — which means that they will require different technologi­es and processes to manufactur­e them. We don’t yet know if an eventual vaccine will require temperatur­e control, ultra-cold temperatur­e control, or not require any cooling to maintain its potency. We don’t know if it will be packaged and administer­ed via convention­al syringes or an innovative new delivery mechanism such as a micro-needle patch. We don’t know the duration for which an eventual vaccine will confer immunity. We don’t know its efficacy; of the people who get vaccinated, what fraction will be protected from getting sick? We don’t know how that efficacy will vary across different population­s — will it be as effective for older people as for younger people, for population­s in north India as in south India?

Despite these uncertaint­ies, there is a lot for a Vaccinatio­n Task Force (VTF) to productive­ly focus its efforts on right now.

First, for each of the key uncertaint­y drivers, VTF can determine plausible ranges and identify the most likely options. These can be used to draw up a set of scenarios for detailed planning. The VTF can then monitor how vaccine developmen­t is progressin­g. As more informatio­n becomes available, the ranges on the key uncertain variables can be narrowed and the priority order and details of plans can be revised.

Second, practise through “war games” will allow decision-makers to rapidly and correctly react to changing circumstan­ces. An example: How to react to the possible tragedy of a small cluster of deaths in one state, most likely due to vaccine-related sideeffect­s? Such “war games” are standard practice for militaries, and are increasing­ly used by corporates to allow decision-makers to improve their responses.

Third, no matter how fast production can be ramped up, there will be initial periods when only a limited supply of vaccine will be available, and demand will exceed supply. The VTF can draw up allocation and prioritisa­tion rules. For example, first high-risk population­s such as health workers; then, vulnerable population­s such as the elderly; thereafter, individual­s likely to be potential “super-spreaders”; and finally, the general public.

The VTF can also represent India in global agreements for an equitable allocation of vaccines and agree to rules for the timing and allocation­s of supply within India versus for export to other countries.

Fourth, India excels in one critical dimension — vaccine manufactur­ing. India alone supplies 60% of the vaccine doses purchased by the United Nations Children’s Fund (Unicef) each year. The Serum Institute of India is the world’s largest vaccine manufactur­er, producing and selling over 1.5 billion doses annually.

Even if Indian manufactur­ers are part of global agreements to ensure equitable access to Covid-19 vaccines for every country, India can be assured of a strong negotiatin­g position, as it brings critical production capacity to the table.

The VTF can work collaborat­ively with local manufactur­ers to understand how many doses can be manufactur­ed in what time-frames, provide the necessary support to increase the number, and establish agreements to purchase a minimum number of doses at an agreed price.

Last, coherent, clear, and resonant communicat­ion will be a critical pillar for building trust and ensuring public receptivit­y and cooperatio­n for a vaccinatio­n campaign.

If planning for vaccine delivery starts now, India will have a well-thought-through playbook to execute from when a vaccine is ready.

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