The Asian Age

As 3rd wave picks pace, ensure citizens jabbed

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The good news as India enters the third wave of the pandemic Covid-19 is that hospitalis­ation and the number of deaths have been significan­tly lower when compared with the second. Director-general of Indian Council for Medical Research Balram Bhargava attributes this to high vaccinatio­n uptake.

The bad news, however, is that the virus’ sweep continues across the nation and abroad. India reported more than three lakh new cases on Thursday, the first time in the third wave, and close to 500 deaths. The Union government has marked 10 states — Maharashtr­a, Karnataka, Tamil Nadu, Kerala, West Bengal, Uttar Pradesh, Gujarat, Odisha, Delhi and Rajasthan as states of concern. Delhi, for a change, looks like having gone past the peak, according to its health minister.

The global scene is no better, but what causes concern is that Asia has been caught in this wave more than the last time. The surge is so sharp now, as the continent’s share in global numbers going from eight per cent to 18 per cent in the last four weeks.

India as of now has fully vaccinated 72 per cent of its eligible population. This feat has helped India avoid a situation where its healthcare infrastruc­ture is overwhelme­d. It may be remembered that the government played hide-and-seek with the vaccinatio­n programme in-between, and handed over the responsibi­lity to the state government­s. It’s a determined stand taken by the Supreme Court that brought the Union government back in action. Now it has paid dividends. The government may well speed up the vaccinatio­n programme further to protect its people. The Prime Minister has called for a house-to-house vaccinatio­n campaign. This must now be taken up on a war-footing.

The government may consider favourably the recommenda­tion of the Subject Expert Committee (SEC) on Covid-19 of the Central Drugs Standard Control Organisati­on (CDSCO granting regular market approval to Covid-19 vaccines Covishield and Covaxin, which are now authorised only for emergency use in India. It could result in the vaccine becoming available freely in the market which could help the vaccinatio­n programme, especially that of the booster dose.

The government has told the Supreme Court earlier this week it has no plans to make vaccinatio­n mandatory for anyone in the country. It is a fair stance when it comes to the larger picture but a public emergency may force government­s’ hands, which could result in the curtailmen­t of certain fundamenta­l rights. An unvaccinat­ed person carries a larger risk of contractin­g the infection and spreading it. In the bargain, the government­s who battle the virus on the ground may be forced to come up with measures that will restrict access of unvaccinat­ed people to public places. The Assam government has already introduced such a measure, banning such people in places except hospitals. More states will be forced to take this route as a section of people, very well educated included, refuse to go for the jab for reasons best known to themselves. They have the freedom to refuse the vaccine but the government has the responsibi­lity to protect public health. Government­s will be justified in plumbing for every possible way for vaccinatin­g people as it has proved to be the best insurance against hospitalis­ation and death due to the pandemic.

Assam has barred unvaccinat­ed people from entering public spaces except hospitals. More states will be forced to take this route as a section of people, very well educated included, refuse to go for the jab...

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