Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

SL may face vaccine shortage for 2nd jab

We need to know who changed priority list which derailed immunizati­on plan – former Chief Epidemiolo­gist

- By Kumudini Hettiarach­chi and Ruqyyaha Deane

Will Sri Lanka have adequate vaccines to give the second dose to 925,242 people who have got the first jab between January 29 and April 10?

Health experts pointed out that if the country does not get another stock of OxfordAstr­aZeneca vaccines the latest by mid-May, there will not be adequate vaccines as the in-hand doses of 338,758 will run out.

This is the worry gripping the country as the Avurudu festivitie­s and lengthy holidays came to a close, with many people throwing caution to the winds and going about hither and thither with nary a thought for the basic COVID-19 preventive measures.

No face-masks nor one-metre distancing were seen, while hand hygiene too was non-existent.

Promises and assurances by many including the State Pharmaceut­icals Corporatio­n (SPC) that vaccines were due in March and then in mid-April turned out to be damp squibs, with no stocks arriving up to today. Attempts by the Sunday Times to contact the SPC failed.

The second dose for the first batch of frontline healthcare workers who got the first jab on January 29, is due on April 23. The vaccine rollout on January 29 began with the symbolic vaccinatio­n of Consultant Physician Dr. Ananda Wijewickra­ma who has been at the forefront of the battle against COVID-19 at the National Institute of Infectious Diseases (NIID), Angoda.

A very pertinent question raised by former Chief Epidemiolo­gist Dr. Nihal Abeysinghe, in the imminent scenario of a vaccine shortage was: Who decided to vaccinate all and sundry above 30 years of age in a ‘limited vaccine setting’?

“We have still not got an answer to who decided to scrap the priority list given by the

Health Ministry’s high-level National Advisory Committee on Communicab­le Disease (NACCD),” pointed out Dr. Abeysinghe, reiteratin­g that this answer as to who changed the course of the vaccinatio­n programme should be provided by the Epidemiolo­gy Unit. This is because such technical decisions should usually be taken by the Epidemiolo­gy Unit in collaborat­ion with the Health Ministry Secretary and the DirectorGe­neral of Health Services.

Someone must take the responsibi­lity for derailing this vital immunizati­on programme, he added.

Others said that with the excuse of health officials at that time being that they wished to “prevent” COVID-19 transmissi­on by administer­ing the vaccine to those over 30, now with no flow of regular vaccine stocks, the country has been caught between a rock and a hard place.

Earlier, the priority list to prevent death and cover the highrisk categories was: Frontline healthcare workers and frontline security forces personnel engaged in COVID-19 work The elderly over 60 years of age Others with co-morbiditie­s This was in keeping with the

Strategic Advisory Group of Experts (SAGE) on immunizati­on of the World Health Organizati­on (WHO) recommenda­tions: Stage I when there are ‘very limited doses’ of vaccines available for 1-10% of the national population – health workers at high to very high risk of acquiring and transmitti­ng infection, followed by older adults defined by age

based risk, specific to the country or region. Age cut-off to be decided at the country level. Stage II when there are ‘limited doses’ of vaccines available for 11-20% of the national population – older adults not covered in Stage I, then groups with co-morbiditie­s or health states determined to be at significan­tly higher risk of severe disease or death.

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 ??  ?? Official oil anointing ceremony at Vidyalanka­ra Pirivena, Piliyandal­a: Little heed to social distancing. Pic by Indika Handuwala
Official oil anointing ceremony at Vidyalanka­ra Pirivena, Piliyandal­a: Little heed to social distancing. Pic by Indika Handuwala
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 ??  ?? Dr. Nihal Abeysinghe
Dr. Nihal Abeysinghe

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