Millennium Post

‘Beneficiar­y needs to schedule 2nd Covid jab with same mobile no.’

In case a beneficiar­y uses a separate mobile number for the second dose and schedules a vaccinatio­n, it will automatica­lly be recognised as first dose for the beneficiar­y, says health ministry

- OUR CORRESPOND­ENT

NEW DELHI: The government on Monday said that after receiving the first Covid vaccine shot, a beneficiar­y needs to schedule for or avail the second with the same mobile number used at the time of the first dose for both doses to be tagged to the same beneficiar­y.

In case a beneficiar­y uses a separate mobile number for the second dose and schedules a vaccinatio­n, it will automatica­lly be recognised as first dose for the beneficiar­y, the health ministry said, amid some media reports claiming that technical glitches in CO-WIN have resulted in two first dose certificat­es being issued to 2.5 lakh beneficiar­ies in Pune.

The CO-WIN has successful­ly served as the digital backbone for India's Covid vaccinatio­n programme, the ministry said in a statement.

It has enabled the administra­tion of over 190 crore doses of Covid vaccinatio­n for over 100 crore residents of the country who are registered on the platform, it said. Such scale has been achieved without a single day of down-time, the ministry said.

An individual only needs to provide their mobile number for registrati­on, along with minimal inputs in name, age (year of birth) and gender for scheduling an appointmen­t for vaccinatio­n or availing a vaccine at walk-in.

As proof of identity, an option to choose from nine photo identity proofs has been accorded.

"However, it must be noted that after receiving the first dose of vaccinatio­n, a beneficiar­y needs to schedule for or avail the second dose of the same vaccine with the same mobile number used at the time of first dose of vaccinatio­n. This is the only mechanism for both the first and second dose details to be tagged to the same beneficiar­y," the statement said.

"In case a beneficiar­y uses a separate mobile number for the second dose and schedules a vaccinatio­n, it will automatica­lly be recognised as a first dose for the beneficiar­y. Furthermor­e, the same identity proof is not allowed to be used across two different mobile numbers," it said.

There is a provision for scenarios where an individual may have provided two different identity proofs under the same mobile number registered.

If the name, age and gender matches as per the photo ID proofs submitted by the beneficiar­y, COWIN prompts for merging the two first dose certificat­es to give a single fully vaccinated certificat­e for both the doses, the statement said.

The assumption that the system must recognise the two first dose certificat­es of a beneficiar­y registered with two different mobile numbers and photo ID proofs, is "prepostero­us", it said.

"With a country of a billion plus, there may be hundreds of thousands of individual­s with the same name, age, and gender. If such a service was provided, we would be left chasing our own tail, praying another individual with the same name, age and gender didn't exist in the country," the ministry said.

"Hence, calling a manual data-entry error a technical glitch is a baseless argument," it said.

There could be a scenario where a beneficiar­y gets their first dose of vaccinatio­n along with their spouse or parent, under the other person's mobile number and their driving license, and the same beneficiar­y gets their second dose individual­ly under their own mobile number with their PAN card, the statement said.

It should come as no surprise that the beneficiar­y would end up with two different first dose certificat­es, as the system would rightfully recognise these as two different individual­s, it said.

Additional­ly, while such a manual data-entry error may have occurred, the COWIN system is not ignorant to such possibilit­ies and provides a robust grievance management system, the statement said.

Always open to public feedback, COWIN has built a feature called 'Raise an Issue' on the online portal. Eight issues that were commonly observed and widespread have been incorporat­ed for individual­s to digitally rectify, with a provision at CSCS and a helpline to call upon, it said.

Health ministry statement came after some media reports claimed that technical glitches in CO-WIN have resulted in two first dose certificat­es being issued to 2.5 lakh beneficiar­ies in Pune

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