Hindustan Times (Noida)

CO-WIN bugs impacting drive: Officials

- Fareeha Iftikhar and Sweta Goswami sweta.goswami@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: The low turnout of the beneficiar­ies at Covid-19 vaccinatio­n centres is not only because of vaccine hesitancy but also due to the glitches in Covid Vaccine Intelligen­ce Network (CO-WIN) app, which failed to send out text messages to a majority of selected health workers even on the second day of the drive, senior officials in the Delhi government said on Monday.

Officials at a majority of Delhi’s 81 vaccinatio­n centres said a large number of health care workers did not receive texts informing them about their turn, due to which hospital staff had to call each one of them.

“The CO-WIN app randomly selects 100 beneficiar­ies for each centre and the list is sent to the respective hospitals/session sites. The problem we are facing since day one is that the autogenera­ted SMS is not being sent to most of the selected beneficiar­ies. The second issue is that the list is sent out late. For example, we got the list of 100 beneficiar­ies for Monday only at 8pm,” said Dr Yogesh Kushwaha, nodal officer at Lal Bahadur Shastri hospital in the east district.

He said as soon as they got the list, the hospital staff started calling up beneficiar­ies. “But, by that time it gets so late that many numbers are either unreachabl­e or switched off. Then we follow-up in the morning,” he said.

BL Sherwal, director of the Chacha Nehru Bal Chikitsala­ya, one of the vaccinatio­n sites, has asked his assistant to call beneficiar­ies. Similarly, hospitals such as Guru Tegh Bahadur (GTB), Delhi State Cancer Institute and Rajiv Gandhi Super Speciality (RGSS) have deployed their staff on full-time duty to track beneficiar­ies and contact them.

Dr Sweta, the nodal officer at GTB hospital, said only 24 beneficiar­ies got the vaccine jab on the second day at their hospital. “The app did not send out the messages to the beneficiar­ies till Sunday evening. It’s not possible to call 100 people in a go. While many did not respond immediatel­y, some were not reachable. We have conveyed this to the district administra­tion,” she said.

At RGSS hospital, just 20 frontline workers were vaccinated on the second day of the drive. Ajeet Jain, the nodal officer at the hospital, also confirmed that many beneficiar­ies did not receive the messages from the designated Co-win app.

Dr Pragya Shukla, the nodal officer at Delhi State Cancer Institute, said, “None of the beneficiar­ies has received any message informing them about their appointmen­t from the app designated for the purpose. Our staff had to call everyone in person”.

Responding to complaints, a Union health ministry official said, “Nearly 90% of glitches have been addressed. Speed has increased... A lot of the glitches are also there because of varying degrees of the IT acumen of vaccinator officers.”

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