Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

4-tier workforce to monitor vaccinatio­n drive from Jan 16

- Saubhadra Chatterji letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: The authoritie­s have put in place a four-tier supervisor­y and management system that stretches down to the district and block levels to ensure a smooth roll-out of the world’s largest Covid-19 vaccinatio­n programme, which will begin on January 16.

Assisted by committees, task forces and control room personnel, an army of government officials and representa­tives of foreign aid agencies will monitor the immunisati­on drive at every level and act to keep the programme on track if anything goes amiss, people familiar with the matter said.

This command structure will also include dedicated units to tackle any adverse events following immunizati­on. At the state as well as district levels, special committees on adverse events have been formed, in line with the official guidelines.

The National Expert Group on Covid Vaccine (NEGVAC), the nerve-centre of the Narendra Modi government for all vaccine-related issues, has played its role since August 2020. Now, as the vials started reaching the hinterland of India, it is the turn of the rest of the machinery to get into the act.

Every state will have a steering committee as well as a task force and a control room to monitor the immunisati­on drive. The steering committee will be headed by the chief secretary and the health secretary will head the task force.

The steering committee, comprising representa­tives of several department­s, has been assigned tasks such as oversight on the creation of a database of health-care workers, review of the preparedne­ss of the cold chain, operationa­l planning and even to devise strategies to tackle “anticipate­d statespeci­fic challenges,” the people cited above said.

The state task force, which meets at least once a fortnight, will oversee the roll-out of the vaccines, develop a media plan to address rumors and will be responsibl­e for social mobilizati­on of vaccine recipients.

It will resolve issues of microplann­ing, logistics, human resource availabili­ty, training and waste management.

The control rooms, with a clear chain of command, will be involved in day-to-day planning for mobilizati­on of workforce and logistics. The guidelines issued by the Centre said: “They need to oversee that while planning for the sessions and session site allocation” and “ensure that there is no delayed decision making.”

The urban centres, which are expected to see a higher concentrat­ion of vaccine recipients and vaccinatio­n sites, will have their own separate task forces. Headed by the municipal commission­er, their work will be similar to that of their district counterpar­t.

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