Business Standard

Supply issues hit vax offtake: Private hospitals

- RUCHIKA CHITRAVANS­HI & SOHINI DAS New Delhi/mumbai, 15 July

Amid concerns over slow pace of vaccinatio­n in private vaccinatio­n centres, private hospitals have flagged shortage of fresh stocks, less demand for paid vaccines and in some cases no allocation by the state as reasons behind poor offtake. While many big hospital chains are sustaining vaccinatio­n on the leftover stock from previous orders, smaller hospitals are unable to access vaccines through any channel.

“We have not received any vaccines from the government or vaccine manufactur­ers even though we are registered on COWIN. We do not know why,” said Shuchin Bajaj, founder director, Ujala Cygnus Group of Hospitals.

Large corporate hospital chains, on the other hand, have been carrying stock, which has resulted in limited orders by them on Cowin in July, industry sources said.

For instance, two large South-based corporate hospitals said they had enough vaccine stock for now, and are pushing to scale up vaccinatio­ns.

“We have not used it (Cowin) yet, as we had stock available from the direct orders placed earlier,” said Manipal Hospitals managing director, Dilip Jose.

However, even among the big chains, many have exhausted their stocks and are feeling the pinch of poor availabili­ty and the complex process of procuremen­t. “In several states, there is still no clarity on how we can procure and what are the timelines for delivery. Also, demand for paid vaccines has fallen sharply due to widespread publicity of free vaccinatio­ns,” a Fortis Healthcare spokespers­on said.

While the Centre has asked states to remove bottleneck­s in procuremen­t of vaccines by private Covid vaccinatio­n centres, companies believe that one of the factors responsibl­e for slow pace of vaccinatio­n in the private sector, is the price of the vaccine — ~780 for Covishield and ~1,410 for Covaxin — as compared to the previously fixed price of ~250. “Consequent­ly, most private centres, which have vaccine stocks available, are getting relatively fewer people as many people might be willing to wait for a free jab in the government vaccinatio­n centres,” said Harsh Mahajan, president, NATHEALTH.

There are over 1,800 private Covid vaccinatio­n sites in the country, while more than 29,000 government centres.

Private hospitals have also observed that the vaccinatio­n demand is beginning to taper off in major cities that have already reached a certain coverage in terms of immunisati­on.

The civic bodies, meanwhile, are aggregatin­g the demand from private hospitals, and are forwarding the same to state government­s as part of the new vaccine guidelines that came into force on June 21. Suresh Kakani, additional commission­er, BMC, said they aggregate the demand indicated by private hospitals in Mumbai, pass it on to the state government, which, in turn, shares it with the Centre.

One small hospital chain owner said they do not have the resources to pay off local officials who sign on the amount of vaccines to be allocated to each private hospital. “Local authoritie­s at the district level approve the vaccine allocation, which then gets the nod of the chief minister’s office. We have to figure out how to work the back channels,” he said.

Under the revised guidelines for Covid vaccinatio­n, 25 per cent of the stock with the manufactur­ers is available for procuremen­t by private hospitals. States are required to aggregate their demand and use the CO-WIN platform as the backend management tool for placing orders.

Health secretary Rajesh Bhushan had said in a review meeting on Wednesday that many private centres had not placed orders for the earmarked quantities of Covid vaccines. If the order was placed, the private centres had not made part of the payment for the indented vaccines. In some cases, no payment had been made towards the order placed, the health ministry said.

About 20 million doses are available with the states and private hospitals to be administer­ed are still while 8.3 million doses are in the pipeline, health ministry said.

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