Exporting limited quantities of Covishield is wise as India is unlikely to meet its vaccination
target by July.
Ten days after the massive COVID-19 vaccination drive began in India to immunise 300
million high-risk individuals first, only over 1.95 million people were vaccinated as of January
25. It is true that while the U.S. took 10 days to breach the one-million mark and the U.K. took
18, India took only six days. The number of people vaccinated each day has been slowly but
steadily increasing since day one — from over 1.91 lakh on January 16 to about 3.35 lakh on
January 25.
Yet, seen in the larger context, the number of individuals vaccinated so far pales in comparison
to the number of children vaccinated each year under the universal immunisation programme.
About 25 million children are born each year in India. Millions of children are immunised
against 10 vaccine-preventable diseases within the first year of life across the country.
By end-December 2020, Serum Institute of India (SII) had already manufactured about 50
million doses of Covishield. Adar Poonawalla, Chief Executive Officer of SII, had told NDTV
that the company manufactures 2.4 million doses each day. On January 11, SII signed an
agreement with the Indian government to supply 11 million doses for local use.
A long way to go
At the current rate of 2 lakh jabs per day, it would take about eight years to immunise the target
population of 300 million people with two doses of the vaccine. This is provided that COVID-
19 vaccination is carried out on all seven days of the week. However, as the Health Ministry
has recommended that COVID-19 vaccination should not affect routine immunisation and
other health services, most States have been vaccinating only on four days a week. The most
populous State, Uttar Pradesh, vaccinates only twice a week.
A single session can vaccinate only 100 people. Until January 25, 35,785 sessions had been
held altogether, with the maximum number of sessions held on a given day touching 6,230 on
January 21. India plans to vaccinate the target 300 million people by July, which would mean
600 million doses to be administered within the next six months. That would require 33,333
sessions to be held on all seven days to vaccinate 100 people per session to complete the
vaccination target by July.
Faster vaccination
Ramping up the vaccination process can be achieved either by increasing the number of
vaccination sites or the number of sessions in a site or both. Since each session should have
five dedicated people, only large hospitals have increased the number of sessions held per day.
The government has permitted vaccine sites to hold only up to seven sessions per day.
Similarly, increasing the number of sites per day too would mean finding additional manpower
and other resources for each site.
However, increasing the number of sites and/or sessions per day alone will not serve the
purpose unless the site selection and number of sessions per site is based on a mapping of
people in a given area who are eligible for vaccination. Since one of the priority groups
included is people younger than 50 years with co-morbidities, only a bottom-up approach to
first identify eligible young people with co-morbidities can help in deciding the number of sites
and sessions needed in an area to cover the eligible population.
Editorial | Injecting confidence: On India’s COVID-19 vaccination drive
Given these complexities, India is unlikely to ramp up the number of people vaccinated per
day before the target date of July, and hence very unlikely to utilise all the 50 million doses
manufactured by SII by end-December before the vaccines reach the expiry date.
Covishield has a shelf life of six months from the date of production. The decision by the
government to allow the company to supply limited quantities of vaccines to other countries
before they reach the expiry date therefore makes eminent sense. Also, India stands to earn the
goodwill of many countries by allowing the export of Covishield, much like in the case of
hydroxychloroquine drug export.
https://www.thehindu.com/opinion/op-ed/more-vaccines-than-takers/article33678182.ece
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