Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

A race against time: Vaccine drive needs boost amid spike

- Anonna Dutt letters@hidustanti­mes.com

NEW DELHI: The Prime Minister’s Office (PMO) convened a high-level meeting on Tuesday and the Union health ministry announced it has dispatched teams to states where Covid-19 cases are rising, as alarm grows over what looks like the beginning of India’s second wave of infections — a developmen­t that now underscore­s more than ever the need to drasticall­y scale up the vaccinatio­n process.

Data shows that the seven-day average of new cases across India dropped to its lowest on February 11, when it touched 10,988, but it has shown a sustained increase since then to reach 12,971 on Monday – a rise of 18%. This increase is fuelled in particular by Maharashtr­a, Punjab and Madhya Pradesh, where cases have grown 127%, 55% and 54% respective­ly.

The Union health ministry late on Tuesday wrote to states asking them to speed up vaccinatio­ns. Experts say it is now a race against time for India to begin a wave of vaccinatio­ns that will beat that of infections.

To do this, it may need to significan­tly review its approach, relaxing curbs to allow anyone who wants a dose to take it, let employers purchase in bulk to give to their staff, and allow more private involvemen­t, including open market sales.

“R(t) for India again on an upward trajectory crossing unity (1). If India could scale up Covid-19 testing so incredibly well with public-private partnershi­p, why not follow that model for vaccine distributi­on? Don’t let the virus and its variants outpace the vaccines,” Bhramar Mukherjee, chair of biostatist­ics at the University of Michigan School of Public Health, said on Tuesday.

“In regions such as Maharashtr­a that are witnessing an increase in the number of cases and its neighbours, we should try to administer at least the first dose of the vaccine to all the people irrespecti­ve of age or profession. There is a need for faster immunisati­on in these areas as it will at least decrease the severity of the disease,” said Dr SK Sarin, director of the Institute of Liver and Biliary Sciences, who headed the Delhi government’s first committee on controllin­g and managing Covid-19 infections.

Over the last week, India has administer­ed roughly 450,000 doses every day, roughly 52% of the target for each day based on the number of sessions held. For each session, 100 people are expected to get shots — on an average, 8,630 sessions were held daily last week.

Officials have said that they expect to accelerate the drive to deliver 5 million doses a day. But, according to the government’s protocol, only those above the age of 50 or 60 will be the first to get doses come next month, when the first of the general public will be covered.

“There are various options being explored to involve the private sector as the government is looking at expanding the vaccinatio­n drive to reach 270 million people next month,” said Dr Randeep Guleria, director, AIIMS.

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