The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

India begins to inoculate all adults against COVID

- By Aniruddha Ghosal and Maria Cheng

Hoping to tame a monstrous spike in coronaviru­s infections, India opened vaccinatio­ns to all adults.

In hopes of taming a monstrous spike in COVID-19 infections, India opened vaccinatio­ns to all adults Saturday, launching a huge inoculatio­n effort that was sure to tax the limits of the federal government, the country’s vaccine factories and the patience of its 1.4 billion people.

The world’s largest maker of vaccines was still short of critical supplies — the result of lagging manufactur­ing and raw material shortages that delayed the rollout in several states. And even in places where the shots were in stock, the country’s wide economic disparitie­s made access to the vaccine inconsiste­nt.

The country’s ambitious effort was also partly overshadow­ed Saturday by a fire in a COVID-19 ward in western India that killed 18 patients, and the death of 12 COVID-19 patients at a hospital in New Delhi after the facility ran out of oxygen for 80 minutes.

Only a fraction of India’s population will be able to afford the prices charged by private hospitals for the shot, experts said, meaning that states will be saddled with immunizing the 600 million Indian adults younger than 45, while the federal government gives shots to 300 million health care and front-line workers and people older than 45.

So far, government vaccines have been free, and private hospitals have been permitted to sell shots at a price capped at 250 rupees, or around $3. That practice will now change: Prices for state government­s and private hospitals will be determined by vaccine companies. Some states might not be able to provide vaccines for free since they are paying twice as much as the federal government for the same shot, and prices at private hospitals could rise.

Since state government­s and private players compete for shots in the same marketplac­e, and states pay less for the doses, vaccine makers can reap more profit by selling to the private sector, said Chandrakan­t Lahariya, a health policy expert. That cost can then be passed on to people receiving the shots, increasing inequity.

“There is no logic that two different government­s should be paying two prices,” he said.

Concerns that pricing issues could deepen inequities are only the most recent hitch in India’s sluggish immunizati­on efforts. Less than 2% of the population has been fully immunized against COVID-19 and around 10% has received a single dose. Immunizati­on rates have also fallen. The average number of shots per day dipped from over 3.6 million in early April to less than 2.5 million right now.

In the worst-hit state of Maharashtr­a, the health minister promised free vaccines for those ages 18 to 44, but he also acknowledg­ed that the shortage of doses meant immunizati­on would not start as planned on Saturday. States say the paucity of shots is one reason why immunizati­ons have declined.

In a positive developmen­t, the country on Saturday received its first batch of Sputnik V vaccines, which it is importing from Russia. Moscow has signed a deal with an Indian pharmaceut­ical company to distribute 125 million doses.

India thought the worst was over when cases ebbed in September. But mass gatherings such as political rallies and religious events were allowed to continue, and relaxed attitudes on the risks fueled a major humanitari­an crisis, according to health experts. New variants of the coronaviru­s have partly led the surge.

The country’s shortage of shots has global implicatio­ns because, in addition to its own inoculatio­n efforts, India has promised to ship vaccines abroad as part of a United Nations vaccine-sharing program that is dependent on its supply.

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 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A worker carries wood on a hand cart as multiple funeral pyres of COVID-19victims burn at a crematoriu­m on the outskirts of New Delhi, India, May 1.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A worker carries wood on a hand cart as multiple funeral pyres of COVID-19victims burn at a crematoriu­m on the outskirts of New Delhi, India, May 1.

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