The Borneo Post (Sabah)

India greenlight­s Sputnik V, to fasttrack approvals for other virus shots

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NEW DELHI: India has authorised the emergency use of Russia’s Sputnik V Covid19 vaccine and will fast-track approval for other shots already passed by other major countries, authoritie­s said yesterday, as infection rates soared to a new record high.

The government has faced mounting calls to approve more vaccines during the surge among the 1.3 billion population and a slower-than-expected mass inoculatio­n drive.

Sputnik V is the third drug to be approved by India after Oxford-AstraZenec­a’s Covishield and Covaxin, which was developed by Indian firm Bharat Biotech.

The SEC expert panel said the Russian vaccine should be authorised “in emergency situations” and this has been accepted, the health ministry said in a statement.

G V Prasad, co-chair of pharmaceut­ical company Dr Reddy’s Laboratori­es, said his firm was “very pleased to obtain the emergency use authorisat­ion”.

“With the rising cases in India, vaccinatio­n is the most effective tool in our battle against Covid19,” he added.

The health ministry also said it would expedite the approval of vaccines not made in India -unlike the first three -- to “expand the basket of vaccines for domestic use and hasten the pace and coverage of vaccinatio­n”.

The jabs will need to have been already been granted emergencyu­se authorisat­ion by regulators, such as the US Food and Drug Administra­tion, the European Medicine Agency and others in Britain and Japan or the World Health Organisati­on, the ministry said.

A requiremen­t for pre-approval clinical trials would be replaced by post-authorisat­ion trials.

“I think it’s significan­t... it’s basically one more step to opening vaccinatio­ns to the private sector, and it’s good, because the government sector alone will not be able to take care of the load,” virologist Shahid Jameel told AFP.

“So if Pfizer or Moderna wants to bring in their vaccines through a supplier, not a manufactur­er, then it is now possible.”

India on Monday reported more than 161,000 new cases – the seventh-consecutiv­e day that more than 100,000 infections have been recorded. That took the country’s total to almost 13.7 million.

Local authoritie­s have imposed night curfews and clamped down on movement and activities.

In India’s financial capital Mumbai, authoritie­s have ordered the constructi­on of three more 2,000-bed field hospitals in the next six weeks. The number of beds for Covid-19 patients has also been ramped up in New Delhi.

Sputnik V, backed by the Russian Direct Investment Fund (RDIF), already has production agreements in India to produce 852 million doses.

RDIF chief executive Kirill Dmitriev said in a statement that the approval was a “major milestone” after “extensive cooperatio­n” on clinical trials of the shot in India.

Dmitriev told Indian broadcaste­r NDTV that the first doses could be ready by late April or May, with ramped up production by June.

“We believe by June, we will really be at good production capacity in India and will become a very meaningful player in vaccinatio­n programme in India,” he added.

India, home to the world’s biggest vaccine manufactur­er, kicked off its inoculatio­n drive in mid-January and has administer­ed more than 108 million shots so far.

But the government’s ambitious goal of vaccinatin­g 300 million people by the end of July has been hit by reports of shortages in some states and vaccine hesitancy.

The government has also slowed its export of jabs due to the rise in cases.

 ?? — AFP photo ?? People crowd along a busy road in Mumbai as India overtook Brazil as the country with the second-highest number of Covid-19 coronaviru­s infections.
— AFP photo People crowd along a busy road in Mumbai as India overtook Brazil as the country with the second-highest number of Covid-19 coronaviru­s infections.

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