Hindustan Times (East UP)

India’s vaccine effort slows as dosage gap trumps output jump

- letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: India’s vaccinatio­n campaign has slowed despite amassing record stockpiles of vaccine, health ministry data showed on Monday, as authoritie­s maintain a wider-thanusual gap between doses in a strategy that has boosted coverage.

Domestic production of the AstraZenec­a vaccine, which accounts for nearly 90% of administer­ed doses, has more than tripled since May, when a supply shortage prompted India to double the period between doses to between 12 and 16 weeks. That gap, exceeding the 8 to 12 weeks recommende­d by the World Health Organizati­on, has allowed India to give at least one vaccine dose to 74% of its 944 million adults, with just 30% getting the full complement of two.

The AstraZenec­a vaccine, known as Covishield, accounts for 861 million doses of India’s total injected figure of 977.6 million, while its other main vaccine, Covaxin has a dose interval of four to six weeks.

Over the last few days, daily stocks of all COVID-19 vaccines have exceeded 100 million doses, the health ministry figures show, for states and federally controlled territorie­s taken together.

In contrast, daily vaccinatio­ns have dropped to an average of 5 million doses this month and even less in the past week, off a daily peak of 25 million last month.

The ministry said it followed recommenda­tions from a group of experts in making any changes to dosage, arrived at by weighing up “scientific and empirical” evidence.

“NTAGI is actively considerin­g the matter of dose interval between Covishield doses,” its spokespers­on told Reuters, referring to the ministry’s National Technical Advisory Group on Immunisati­on (NTAGI).

However, vaccine supply alone should not determine the gap, said Chandrakan­t Lahariya, a physician and epidemiolo­gist in the capital, New Delhi.

“There is no scientific rationale for reducing the gap,” he added. “In fact, retaining this gap has the possibilit­y of giving stronger protection and longerlast­ing immunity.”

THE MINISTRY SAID IT FOLLOWED RECOMMENDA­TION FROM A GROUP OF EXPERTS IN MAKING ANY CHANGES TO DOSAGE

 ?? AFP ?? A health worker inoculates a resident with a dose of the Covaxin during a door-to-door drive at a slum in Chennai on Monday.
AFP A health worker inoculates a resident with a dose of the Covaxin during a door-to-door drive at a slum in Chennai on Monday.
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