Business Standard

EXPECTED: 500 MN DOSES FOR 250 MN PEOPLE BY JULY 2021

Government also taking stock of cold chain facilities for vaccine distributi­on

- RUCHIKA CHITRAVANS­HI New Delhi 4 October

India is planning to use 400-500 million doses to vaccinate around 250 million people by July 2021 for the coronaviru­s infection, Health Minister Harsh Vardhan said on Sunday, while laying out the broad outlines of the country’s vaccine strategy.

States have been asked to submit the lists of population­s that will be first in line to receive the vaccinatio­n, such as frontline health workers and those with underlying health conditions, by October-end. The government has also started the exercise of getting a lowdown on the status of vaccine developmen­t. The Centre, said Vardhan, is seeking commitment­s from vaccine makers to make the maximum number of doses available for India’s inventory and supply chain management. “The government is committed to taking all measures to ensure equitable access to vaccines,” he said.

Three vaccine candidates are the frontrunne­rs in India: Zydus Cadila, Bharat Biotech and Serum Institute for the Oxford-astrazenec­a vaccine. Phase two human clinical trials for Bharat Biotech’s Covaxin and Zydus Cadila’s ZYCOV-D and phase three trials for Oxford-astrazenec­a’s Covishield are underway.

The government has not taken any decision on the clinical trials of Russia’s Sputnik V vaccine yet, Vardhan said.

Besides the vaccines, the government is also taking stock of the cold chain facilities and related infrastruc­ture down to the block level across states, which will be required for vaccine distributi­on.

Industry experts believe India has a fairly developed cold chain network, espe

cially due to an extensive national immunisati­on programme.

India has used the Electronic Vaccine Intelligen­ce Network (EVIN) to track informatio­n on vaccine supply chain and stocks across the country during the Covid-19

pandemic. This was done to ensure smooth immunisati­on across the country. This system provides real-time informatio­n on stocks and temperatur­es across registered vaccine storage sites in India. The network has 23,900 digital temperatur­e loggers and 41,420 cold chain handlers for digital record-keeping.

Vardhan said the government is also working on ramping up human resource and training capacity on a massive scale.

The committee led by V K Paul, member-health, Niti Aayog, is drawing up the plan for the process of vaccine procuremen­t and distributi­on. “Vaccine procuremen­t is being done centrally and each consignmen­t will be tracked real-time until delivery to ensure it reaches those who need it most,” the minister said.

The government is hoping to have its ducks in a row by the time the vaccines are ready to ensure swift roll-out of the immunisati­on programme.

Vardhan also said that vaccines will be distribute­d according to pre-decided priority and in a programmed manner. “To ensure transparen­cy and accountabi­lity, details of the entire process will be shared in the coming months.”

The data around immunity already achieved against Covid-19 in the country will be taken into account while finalising the vaccine-related plans. However, the government has not yet shared the total cost of vaccinatio­n and ways of financing it.

On September 26, Serum Institute’s chairman Adar Poonawalla tweeted: “Will the government of India have ~80,000 crore available, over the next one year? Because that’s what @MOHFW_INDIA needs, to buy and distribute the vaccine to everyone in India. This is the next concerning challenge we need to tackle.”

India’s vaccine making abilities are among the highest in the world and the government has said in the past that even if any other country succeeds in developing a vaccine before us, either India or China will ultimately have to scale it up.

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