Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Focus on vaccinatin­g all, don’t lower guard: Modi

- HT Correspond­ent letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: While India has managed the coronaviru­s pandemic well so far, a surge in cases in some states recently has manifested the need to stay alert and ensure all eligible persons, are vaccinated, PM Narendra Modi said on Wednesday.

At a virtual meeting with chief ministers to review the Covid-19 situation across the country, Modi said the Centre’s priority is also to vaccinate all eligible children at the earliest with special campaigns needed in schools. On Tuesday, India’s drugs regulator cleared two vaccines for use in children -- one for those between the ages of 5 and 12 and the other for those in the 6-12 age group. “It is clear that the Covid challenge is not fully over yet. Omicron and its sub variants can create problems as evident by the experience of many countries in Europe. Sub-variants are causing surges in many countries. India has been able to deal with the situation better than most. Still, in the last two weeks, increasing cases in some of the states show that we need to stay alert,” Modi said. After falling to a 24-month of low of 996 new cases a day for the week ended April 15, the seven-day average of daily cases has inched up again and was 2,614 on Tuesday.

Maharashtr­a, Uttar Pradesh, Mizoram, Delhi and Haryana are among states and Union territorie­s that have shown an increase in cases. The Centre had written to these states and Union territorie­s, asking them to take measures to contain the spread.

Referring to the Omicrondri­ven third wave, Modi said that even as India witnessed up to three lakh cases per day, all states handled the situation while also allowing social and economic activity to continue. This balance should be maintained in our future strategy also, he said. While the highly infectious variant caused a surge in cases, it did not overwhelm India’s health system with most cases not requiring hospitalis­ation. India has also full vaccinated almost its entire adult population. Onlt 5-10% of active Covid cases have needed hospitalis­ation in the third Covid-19 wave as compared to 20-23% in the devastatin­g second wave, data shared by the Union ministry of health and family welfare in January this year showed.

The Omicron (third) wave was handled with determinat­ion and without panic, and in the last two years, all aspects of the coronaviru­s fight, whether related to health infrastruc­ture, oxygen supply or vaccinatio­n, have been strengthen­ed to fight the pandemic, Modi .

“In the third wave, none of the states saw the situation go out of control. This should be seen in the context of the massive vaccinatio­n drive. Covid vaccines have reached each and every person and it is a matter of pride that 96% of the adult population is vaccinated with at least one dose and about 84% people above 15 years of age have received both the doses. Vaccines, as per experts, are the biggest safeguard against corona,” Modi said.

Bharat Biotech’s Covaxin and Serum Institute of India’s Covishield are the two vaccines that have been the mainstay of India’s national Covid immunizati­on programme for adults. Children aged 12-15 are being administer­ed Biological E’s Corbevax while adolescent­s have been receiving Covaxin under the government programme.

The third shot of Covid-19 vaccines was rolled out for certain categories of citizens from January 10. People above the age of 60 with certain illnesses and those working in high-risk healthcare and front-line jobs were allowed to take what the government classified as precaution doses, as long as their second shots were taken more than nine months ago. The government also made the third dose available to all adults at private vaccinatio­n centres from April 10.

On Tuesday, India’s drug regulator approved the emergency use of Corbevax and Covaxin for children under the age of 12 years. While Corbevax was approved by the Drugs Controller General of India (DCGI) for administra­tion in children aged 5-12 years, Covaxin was cleared for use in those aged 6-12 years.

The decision assumes significan­ce as it sets up the stage to protect young children from the coronaviru­s disease, particular­ly at a time when schools have opened after nearly two years of closure, which, experts say have caused considerab­le learning and social adjustment gaps.

“It is satisfying to see that more and more children are getting the vaccine. The campaign to vaccinate 12-15 year-olds began in March and only yesterday, permission was granted for Covaxin vaccine for 6-12 year-old children. Our priority is to vaccinate all eligible children at the earliest. For this, as before, special campaigns will also be needed in schools. Teachers and parents should be aware about this,” the PM said.

 ?? PTI ?? A health care worker administer­s a dose of a Covid-19 vaccine to a student in Bikaner.
PTI A health care worker administer­s a dose of a Covid-19 vaccine to a student in Bikaner.

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