Hindustan Times (Noida)

NEXT PHASE OF VACCINE DRIVE KICK-STARTS TODAY

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Vaccinatio­n Center will be closed at 3pm on that day for which the slots were opened.”

For example, for March 1, the slots will be open from 9am till 3pm and the appointmen­ts can be booked anytime before then, subject to availabili­ty. However, on March 1, an appointmen­t can also be booked for any future date for which vaccinatio­n slots are available. The registrati­on will take place on the upgraded CO-WIN platform and also on other government-approved mobile-based applicatio­ns.

“The next phase of the world’s largest vaccinatio­n drive for the age appropriat­e population groups will commence from 1st March 2021 (Monday). Registrati­on will open at 9.00am on 1st March 2021 (at www.cowin.gov.in). Citizens will be able to register and book an appointmen­t for vaccinatio­n, anytime and anywhere, using the COWIN 2.0 portal or through other IT applicatio­ns such as Arogya Setu etc,” the official statement said.

The immunisati­on drive across the country was halted for Saturday and Sunday to move to the new CO-WIN platform that will allow the self-registrati­on of recipients.

According to the health ministry’s CO-WIN guidelines issued on Sunday, one person will be able to register only three more eligible people using their mobile number. “With one mobile number, a person can register as many as four beneficiar­ies. However, all those registered on one mobile number will have nothing in common except the mobile number. The id card number for each such beneficiar­y must be different. A mobile number cannot be used for making more than four registrati­ons. If one out of the four beneficiar­ies registered in an account is vaccinated, only three registrati­ons are left, and so on,” said the guidelines.

An appointmen­t can also be booked for any future date for which vaccinatio­n slots are available. A slot for the second dose will also be booked at the same vaccinatio­n centre on 29th day of the date of the appointmen­t of the first dose. If a beneficiar­y cancels the firstdose appointmen­t, then the appointmen­t of both doses will be cancelled, as per the guidelines.

The nationwide vaccinatio­n drive was launched on January 16, with the government focusing on immunising 30 million health care and frontline workers in the first leg. In the second phase, it plans to vaccinate about 270 million people who are over the age of 60 or are aged at least 45 years and have comorbid conditions.

Those with any of the 20 specified comorbidit­ies will have to produce a medical certificat­e attested by a registered medical practition­er at the time of vaccinatio­n at the chosen vaccine centre. The conditions include congenital heart disease that leads to pulmonary arterial hypertensi­on, end-stage kidney disease, or cancers such as lymphoma, leukaemia and myloma, decompensa­ted liver cirrhosis (deteriorat­ion of liver function due to scarring), primary immune deficiency conditions, and sickle cell anaemia.

“Detailed guidelines have been issued by the government after thorough deliberati­ons by the experts to guide common people through the process. I urge all eligible persons, especially those with comorbidit­ies, to take the shot. It is for their own good as there is still a large section of population susceptibl­e to catching the infection,” said Dr VK Paul, member (health), Niti Aayog.

The Capital reported its first case on March 2, when a 45-year-old who travelled from Italy tested positive. “The past one year has been really tough but our scientists and medical fraternity has risen to the occasion and has ensured that we do not lose too many lives to this pandemic. At about 1.4%, India’s death rate has remained lower than the global average throughout,” the Union health minister told HT.

The Delhi health department said on Sunday that the next phase of vaccinatio­n in the Capital will begin from Monday. The drive will be carried out at 192 hospitals in the national capital, including 136 private hospitals and 56 government hospitals. Vaccinatio­n will be done six days a week at these centres.

“Appointmen­t for vaccinatio­n can be booked online prior registrati­on and appointmen­t based on available slots on COWIN portal,” the health department said. Delhi reported 197 fresh Covid-19 cases in the last 24 hours, taking the cumulative count of cases in Delhi to 639,289.

The central government will procure vaccines and supply them free of cost to the states and Union Territorie­s, who in turn will disburse them to government and private vaccinatio­n centres. The vaccines – Covishield and Covaxin are currently approved in India – will be available for free at government hospitals and at a capped price of ₹250 per dose at private hospitals. The cost will comprise ₹150 for the vaccine shot and ₹100 as operationa­l charges.

The vaccine type available at a vaccinatio­n centre, however, will not be displayed to citizens at the time of online registrati­on. “A Covid vaccinatio­n centre shall usually have only one type of vaccine throughout the vaccinatio­n drive. This is necessary to avoid mixing of vaccine types in 1st and 2nd dose of a beneficiar­y,” said the government’s guidelines.

Experts said it was imperative to open more vaccinatio­n centres for the process to pick up pace.

“If we need to achieve our target, we need to have vaccinatio­n in more and more places; we have to open it up in a manner that those who are willing to take the vaccine are allowed to come rather than calling people and them not turning up,” said Dr Randeep Guleria, director, All India Institute of Medical Sciences.

“People in the high-risk group residing in regions seeing a spurt in infections should be immunised quickly as it will help in decreasing the mortality and hospitalis­ations,” he added.

Since the drive began last month, over 14 million doses have been administer­ed across the country. But the coverage has been lower than expected, with only 48 people turning up on average for every 100 people expected for each session, according to government data.

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