Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

580 adverse events reported in three days of vaccinatio­n

Low rate of adverse effects, says Centre; Capital records 26 AEFIs on Monday after over 3k shots

- Rhythma Kaul letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: India reported 580 adverse events following immunisati­on (AEFI) out of 381,305 people vaccinated for Covid-19 till Monday, said data from the Union health ministry, translatin­g to just 0.15% — a rate experts said was key to dispelling hesitancy among recipients that was dogging the inoculatio­n programme.

In Delhi, 26 AEFI were recorded on Monday out of 3,593 shots administer­ed, a rate of 0.72%. Overall, 133 adverse reactions, which can be caused by allergies or underlying medical conditions and are not necessaril­y causally linked to vaccines, were reported among 148,266 jabs given on Monday, which marked the third day of the nationwide immunizati­on drive.

“So far, cumulative 580 AEFI have been reported, of which seven needed hospitalis­ation,” said Manohar Agnani, additional

secretary, Union health ministry.

Two people died since Saturday, Agnani added. One of them, a hospital employee from Uttar Pradesh’s Moradabad town, suffered a cardiac arrest and his death wasn’t related to the vaccine, the authoritie­s declared. A post-mortem examinatio­n would be conducted late on Monday to ascertain the reason for the other death, of a 43-yearold man from Ballari in Karnataka. Of the seven people hospitalis­ed, three were from Delhi, said Agnani.

One was admitted in the intensive care unit (ICU) of the All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS), Delhi, after comwould

plaining of uneasiness, and developed rashes within 15 minutes of getting the shot. The second was admitted for uneasiness to the Northern Railways Hospital. Both were discharged on Sunday. A third person, who fainted, is under observatio­n at a private hospital in east Delhi, said Agnani.

Adverse events are observed with most vaccines and can range from pain, mild swelling at injection site and body ache to breathless­ness and hospitalis­ation. Experts said AEFIs needed to be evaluated in the context of risk-and-benefits associated with immunizati­on.

“Acceptable level of AEFI ideally be zero, but that is not the case. I think it is around 0.2% and yet we are focusing on that and not the 99.8% benefit,” said Dr Shahid Jameel, former CEO of Wellcome Trust/DBT India Alliance.

In the case of coronaviru­s vaccines, the government has said that there can be mild AEFIs, such as pain and swelling at the site of injection, mild fever, nausea, giddiness and mild rashes. Serious AEFIs can be a severe allergic reaction, such as an anaphylact­ic shock, which could potentiall­y require hospitalis­ation.

India is administer­ing two vaccines as part of the first phase of Covid-19 immunisati­on covering roughly 30 million health care and other frontline workers. The lead candidate is the Oxford-AstraZenec­a vaccine, manufactur­ed by Serum Institute of India and locally known as Covishield, and the second is Bharat Biotech-made Covaxin, which has spurred some controvers­y because its efficacy data isn’t publicly known.

Uttarakhan­d reported one case of AEFI, and the health care worker is stable and under observatio­n at AIIMS, Rishikesh. He was admitted to the hospital on Saturday.

 ?? AFP ?? A nurse receives a Covid-19 vaccine at Osmania General Hospital in Hyderabad on Monday.
AFP A nurse receives a Covid-19 vaccine at Osmania General Hospital in Hyderabad on Monday.

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