Business Standard

Ready for round-3, but no decision on who’ll pay

Public vaccinatio­n back-end technology in place, private sector role likely in procuring doses for staff

- NIVEDITA MOOKERJI & SOHINI DAS

The government has begun to scale up the Covid-19 vaccinatio­n process in multiple steps, but is yet to take a call on how much it would spend.

As part of scaling up, the appointmen­t and registrati­on system for the general public is ready to go live. Such a system will enable anybody over 50 years of age or with co-morbiditie­s to get a date, place and time of own choice for getting the vaccine shots. The Union Health Ministry is expected to open up public vaccinatio­n by end of March after registrati­on through CO-WIN, the cloud-based end-to-end IT solution for vaccinatio­n, sources said.

No decision has been taken yet on who will bear the cost for the upcoming vaccinatio­n round meant for 50 plus and those with comorbidit­ies, according to an official. There are indication­s that the government may go for a hybrid model in terms of payment— income criteria may be considered for giving the shots free or possibly at a subsidised level for some. Sources in industry bodies as well as state government­s noted that the Centre could pick up the tab for at least the initial phases of vaccinatin­g those with co-morbiditie­s. The target is to vaccinate 270 million in the third round.

While there’s no definite plan yet on vaccine being sold in the open market, the private sector is likely to be involved in the vaccinatio­n drive, an official privy to the developmen­t said. Many corporate groups including Reliance Industries and Tatas are learnt to be in talks to procure vaccine for their employees. RIL, for example, has the list ready— around 900,000 including employees and their immediate families. ‘’The private sector may be allowed to buy vaccine from the manufactur­ers,’’ a source said. The government is unlikely to pay for corporate employees, an official pointed out. Even when the private sector procures it, the government may fix the price, he said. Also, the government will have the responsibi­lity for generating the final vaccinatio­n certificat­e, irrespecti­ve of who’s procuring the doses or who’s getting inoculated. ‘’It will be a centralise­d process to ensure there’s no leakage in the system,’’ the source added.

The technology backend is however in place after the initial technical glitches with the COWIN platform, which has now been integrated with Covid contacttra­cing app Aarogya Setu.

R S Sharma, who chairs a panel to oversee the technology network for Covid inoculatio­n, said COWIN would offer discoverab­ility so that anybody seeking a vaccinatio­n appointmen­t will be shown hospitals or health centres close to his location.

“At the centre of it all is a citizen-centric approach. The platform will give you the place, date and time of your choice for vaccinatio­n. It will also track when the first shot has been administer­ed and send intimation for the second jab,’’ Sharma said. A digital certificat­e will be generated once the process is completed.

But there are questions around how the plan will be executed. Suresh Kakani, additional municipal commission­er of Brihanmumb­ai Municipal Corporatio­n (BMC), said, ‘’as of now there’s lack of clarity on how to enroll the eligible citizens’’.

So far, only health workers and other frontline people, shortliste­d by the government, have been vaccinated free of cost. The total doses administer­ed have crossed 7.4 million in less than a month in India.

The government has also placed fresh orders to vaccine makers - 4.5 million doses to Bharat Biotech and 10 million to Serum Institute of India (SII). This is in addition to the first lot of procuremen­t of 16.5 million doses from the two vaccine makers. SII has an inventory of around 50 million doses-enough to meet the country’s requiremen­ts for now even as it steps up the exports.

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