Hindustan Times (Delhi)

‘Not viable to run jab centres with ₹150 cap on service fee’

- Anonna Dutt anonna.dutt@htlive.com

NEW DELHI: Several private hospitals in the Capital have shut drive-through and outreach Covid-19 vaccinatio­ns in offices and colonies, arguing that the ₹150 cap on service charge imposed by the Centre does not allow them to adequately recover costs involved in the inoculatio­n process.

One of the Capital’s first drive-through vaccinatio­n centres, set up at a mall in Dwarka by Akash Healthcare, which provided free shots to the under-privileged, shut on Friday, after the hospital said it was no longer viable to run.

“...We have decided to stop it now, owing to the new vaccinatio­n pricing, as running it has become non-viable now,” the hospital said in a statement.

As he announced free vaccines for Indian states on Monday, Prime Minister Narendra Modi said private hospitals will be allowed to charge a maximum service charge of ₹150 on the fixed price of the jabs.

Hospitals have, however, said this fee is too low to cover the cost of maintainin­g the cold chain, transporti­ng consumable­s, medical staff, ambulances, and proper bio-medical waste disposal.

Madhukar Rainbow hospital, which had set up outreach vaccinatio­n points in various colonies with the help of the local resident welfare organisati­ons, said the centres are all incurring losses.

“There is the cost of the vaccine, and many additional costs if we set up outreach camps. We need to pay for the ambulance, the nurse and doctors, dispose of the biomedical waste properly. There is a cost to all of this. We are planning to send a letter to the government asking them to review the prices for these outreach camps,” said Dinesh Vashishth, COO of the hospital.

Earlier, Fortis Healthcare, in a statement also said the ₹150 cap was too little to run outreach centres.

“Unfortunat­ely, the cap of service charge at ₹150 will not cover the additional costs incurred for such off-site vaccinatio­n camps which involve substantia­l costs like ambulance, transport, extra staff and doctor, plus TDS involved in many cases. We urge the government to consider a higher charge for off-site vaccinatio­n camps to enable expanded coverage,” the hospital had said in a statement the day the announceme­nt was made by the Prime Minister.

“The ₹150 charge is enough for hospitals to carry out vaccinatio­n at their premises but it is too less if they need to set up drive-throughs and outreach camps... The problem was that many hospitals started charging an overhead cost of ₹300 to ₹400, which is why the government had to step in to regulate the prices. We need to rationalis­e this cost; we will pick this issue up in the next meeting,” said Girdhar Gyani, director general of Associatio­n of Healthcare Providers (India) – an organisati­on of over 10,000 health care providers from across India.

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