Hindustan Times (Ranchi)

India vaccinatio­ns pick up pace, 1.6 million inoculated

KARNATAKA TOPS THE LIST WITH MOST NUMBER OF VACCINATIO­NS, FOLLOWED BY ODISHA AND ANDHRA PRADESH

- Rhythma Kaul letters@hindustant­imes.com

India has vaccinated 1.6 million health care workers since coronaviru­s disease (Covid-19) vaccinatio­n drive was launched in the country on January 16, said Union health ministry in a statement issued on Sunday.

Karnataka tops the list so far with maximum (1,88,971) number of vaccinatio­ns, followed by Odisha (1,52,371) and Andhra Pradesh (1,47,030).

Close to 30,000 vaccinatio­n sessions have been conducted in the country at about 3,000 plus sites, it added.

“India took only six days to roll out 1 million vaccine doses. This count is higher for countries like USA and the UK. The UK took 18 days whereas USA took 10 days to reach the 1 million mark,” the ministry statement read.

There are still an estimated 8.4 million health care workers remaining to be vaccinated across the country, and the government is making efforts to scale up by increasing vaccinatio­n sites in next few weeks.

The initial plan was to ramp the facility to add at least 2,000 more vaccinatio­n sites across the country, making it about 5,000 sites, in about two weeks from the launch day.

Dr VK Paul, member (health), Niti Aayog, had said during the launch, “It is starting with about 3,000, but the vaccinatio­n sessions will be scaled up to about 5,000 in next fortnight or so.”

The Centre had advised states to conduct Covid-19 vaccinatio­ns for at least four days in a week, and states, after due deliberati­on, had come up with an individual vaccinatio­n plan according to their local requiremen­ts, infrastruc­ture and human resources availabili­ty.

Different states are following a different vaccinatio­n schedule that ranges from six to two days in a week, depending on local conditions and needs.

Initially, there was a low turnout of health care workers at vaccinatio­n centres, which both the centre and state government­s attributed to vaccine hesitancy among the medical profession­als because of spread of a lot of misinforma­tion regarding Covid-19 vaccines permitted for use in India.

India’s drugs regulator has granted approval for use in India to two Covid-19 vaccines.

Covaxin, which is an indigenous vaccine developed by Bharat Biotech Internatio­nal Limited, and Covishield, a vaccine manufactur­ed by Serum Institute of India (SII), and developed by Oxford University and AstroZenec­a, has received restricted emergency use authorisat­ion from the national drugs regulator on January 3.

While all states have been given Covishield, about 12 states have so far been given Covaxin. The centre plans to increase the number of states that will introduce Covaxin in days to come. The seven other states that would start doing so from Monday onwards are Chhattisga­rh, Gujarat, Jharkhand, Kerala, Madhya Pradesh, Punjab and

West Bengal.

Government has been making serious efforts to dispel concerns regarding the vaccines, for which it last week also launched a mass digital awareness campaign, tapping even an old Bollywood classic — a Kishore Kumar song from the 1972 Rajesh Khanna starrer Amar Prem — to drive home its message.

As part of the campaign, the Union health ministry has also been publicizin­g feedback from senior doctors who took the shot against the viral disease, and were doing fine.

“One of the reasons why vaccinatio­ns have picked up is because a lot of health care workers have got confidence on seeing how there senior were doing fine after receiving the Covid-19 vaccine shot. It helps to see your seniors and peers doing fine after receiving the jab,” said a senior health ministry official, requesting not to be identified.

Great to speak to President @JoeBiden this evening.

After his first conversati­on with the new US president over phone

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