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In Small Doses

Vaccine shortage has triggered panic and anger, but projections suggest 200 crore shots will be available by December

India cannot be too ambitious바카라at least it cannot afford to proceed merely on the basis of numbers that can be more easily expressed in words than actually handled, person by unvaccinated person. Last November, as the health ministry began preparations for India바카라s Covid vaccination drive, its goal was to give the shots to 30 crore people by August or September this year. By now, at the end of May, about half of that target바카라15 crore people바카라have received one shot. As of May 25, cumulatively, 19.84 crore doses have been administered, counting both first and second doses. The speed of vaccination in all these months has been somewhat noticeably바카라and tragically바카라parabolic, rising up to a high point in April and then tapering off. Yes, even at last week바카라s considerably slower pace of about 13 lakh jabs a day, that original milestone is reachable. But the equations on the ground are vastly altered now: those targets were envisaged at a time of relative luxury. Supply constraints have coincided with a brutal second wave of infections in between. The race that has to be entered is both a sprint and a canter that has to be sustained over the long distance. The runner cannot collapse.

But the race track is doubly deceitful. First, the incoherence which has slipped in anew. What was a smooth, orderly, stage-by-stage vaccination programme earlier this year hit a discordant note since it opened up for the entire adult population in May amidst a supply shortage that바카라s spreading some panic and anger. Many states are now clarifying that first doses for the 18-44 age group are currently on hold while they mop up the seniors with the available stock.

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Take, on top of that, the controversial move to allow states to buy doses directly. Many states and even a couple of municipal corporations (Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation, for instance) have floated global tenders to buy vaccines바카라in fact, veterans in public health don바카라t recall a situation where states have had to step in. It has always been squarely the Centre바카라s job. Its sudden liking of democratic devolution is creating its own problems. This week, Punjab became the first state to acknowledge a response바카라Moderna, one of the manufacturers it had approached, declined saying it will only deal with New Delhi. Soon after, Delhi chief minister Arvind Kejriwal too reported that Pfizer has refused to sell directly to the state. 바카라I don바카라t foresee much interest from manufacturers. Most of them have already committed supplies,바카라 says Dr Chandrakant Lahariya, a public policy and health systems expert. A Union health ministry spokesman too admitted this week that the order books of Pfizer and Moderna are already full and any supplies would depend on their surpluses.

Since vaccine supply is constrained at a global level, it바카라s not a case of merely buying from the lowest bidder, explains Neeraj Jain, country manager, PATH. 바카라I think the challenge with procurement being opened up is they are all competing for the same stock of vaccines,바카라 says Jain. 바카라That means two things can happen. One is, of course, we can바카라t find stock. The second option is for some country which has extra stock to start giving out some of that, either directly through aid, or through agents.바카라 That latter scenario could run the risk of creating a bidding competition, leading to unreasonably inflated pricing, he says.

Currently, the Centre is buying vaccines at $4 per dose. Imported vaccines will naturally cost more, experts say. For instance, Pfizer is reported to have supplied vaccines to Israel at $30 per dose, coming in for considerable global criticism earlier this year. Even if states that have issued tenders for import of vaccines are lucky, the guess is they could be looking at $10-12 per dose, according to some experts. Geeta Athreya, who has worked closely with the national immunisation programme in the past, is aghast that India, instead of engaging in this competitive field as a single large entity, has left the individual states to their own devices바카라a major concern being that a richer state will be able to buy more or pay a higher price.

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It바카라s not in India바카라s interest to create such a confusing situation, feels Alok Mukhopadhyay, chairman, Voluntary Health Association of India, and convener of the Independent Commission on Development & Health in India (ICDHI), which works closely with the PMO. 바카라The decision to allow states to import Covid-19 vaccines is disastrous. Everyone in the global market is out to make a profit, and here we are throwing the states, with their fragile economies, to go into the competitive market to bargain, do hard negotiation, and pay in hard currency. It바카라s a situation that can go astray,바카라 he says. Though both the central and state health ministers are represented in the Central Council of Health, a constitutional body, there has been no deliberation to map out a strategy to tackle the situation, says Mukhopadhyay, who had written to the Union health minister a month back suggesting an action plan.

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Supplies will start easing up by July-August because many new vaccines are in multiple stages of trials, says Neeraj Jain. He points to a global study that PATH carried out last year with the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations (CEPI), which projected 3-4 billion vaccine doses as becoming available worldwide by the end of 2021. The projections are looking rosier since, but the problem is with the actual global supply.

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The government바카라s own projections point to 2 billion (200 crore) doses being available in India by December (see graphic), accounting for a production ramp-up by both the Serum Institute of India (which makes Covishield) and Bharat Biotech (Covaxin) and a slew of new vaccines in advanced trials. Hyderabad-based Dr Reddy바카라s Laboratories, which has already soft-launched Sputnik V, says it will import the initial doses from Russia until July or August. Then local manufacturing will kick in, potentially trimming the price from the current Rs 995 per dose, according to the company.

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Seniors First바카라Many states are putting on hold vaccination for the 18-44 age group

Photograph by Suresh K Pandey

Extending that projection a bit further, India could be looking at 3 billion doses by the first quarter of 2022, said Dr V.K. Paul, who chairs the National Expert Group on Vaccine Administration for Covid-19 (NEGVAC), at a briefing on May 13. Sudarshan Jain, secretary general of the Indian Pharmaceutical Alliance (IPA), too reckons domestic supplies will be streamlined within a few months. 바카라Between August to December, the pharma sector is confident of being able to supply 1.5 billion doses which should be enough for India. Already, production in the country has been ramped up to around 75 million doses a month,바카라 he says.

But vaccine manufacturing is a complex process, says Dr Lahariya. 바카라Projections are projections. Many vaccines are in Phase 1 or 2 or 3 clinical trials바카라we really don바카라t know what the final outcomes will be. Scaling up production is going to be a separate process. So all of those should be taken as extremely optimistic projections,바카라 he says. 바카라We need to be ready with plan B.바카라

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Even with the available supply, the first step is to vaccinate the high priority groups, he says. 바카라So, let바카라s not be emotional and say it바카라s opened up for everyone and we can바카라t do anything now. In my opinion, states should be bold and should categorically decide, based on the advice of technical experts, how best they want to prioritise. If that means halting vaccination for a few younger age groups until sufficient and assured supply, so be it.바카라

바카라Comfortable numbers will come by December. We need to do some smart planning,바카라 says Prof N.K. Ganguly, former dir­ector, Indian Council of Medical Research. That involves reaching rural India, where the chances of mortality are higher because of the poor health infrastructure바카라luckily, the immunisation network covers rural areas because of India바카라s strength in infant vaccination, Ganguly points out. 바카라We have to go to those villages and put supplies there.바카라

The second strategy, he says, is to place advance orders right away because the pandemic 바카라is not going to go away바카라 anytime soon. 바카라We have to immunise, maybe every year we may have to give a booster. So if there are 2-3 other companies, we need to give them advance orders,바카라 he tells Outlook. This means being ready to absorb the risks involved: outcomes will hinge on clinical trials and approvals. That바카라s how Operation WarpSpeed in the US went about it, he points out. 바카라We really need to do the same바카라place advance orders so they can start manufacturing. And those who have got authorisation, we need to help them to build infrastructure,바카라 says Ganguly.

A former health secretary who had once headed the national immunisation programme says India has the wherewithal to handle vaccination on a large scale and an adequate cold chain capacity for storing vaccines. He ass­umes most states will not be importing vaccines that need to be stored at below minus 4 degrees Celsius바카라that leaves little choice besides Covishield, Covaxin and Sputnik V (the Moderna and Pfizer vaccines need upto -70 degrees Celsius). 바카라States will have to draft strategies to vaccinate people in the 18-45 age group,바카라 says the former bureaucrat. 바카라Beyond acquiring vaccines, there are challenges of cold storage, logistics, supply chain, having trained people for administering and maintaining records. This is an evolving process and cannot be hastened,바카라 he says.

Supply crunches are not unique to India. Various other countries too are in a similar situation. But what we probably need, given our iniquitous social landscape, is a more well-thought-through approach, says Dr Anant Bhan, who specialises in global health, bioethics and health policy. He points to the multiple price points in the current procurement policy. 바카라Right now, there바카라s a potential issue around equity. People with resources, either financial resources or access to technology, are much better placed,바카라 he says.

Neeraj Jain of PATH says a coordinated approach will be the way ahead, given that private organisations too are ready to put in money. 바카라Not just for their employees but even communities around their factories or communities at large. There are a lot of conversations going on in that direction,바카라 he says. 바카라I바카라m just hopeful we get a single-window procurement process going. Once that happens, everything else can be easily brought into place. If we go into a bidding war, we바카라ll get into a challenge of increased inequity of access.바카라 Not good news for a country like India.

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Vaccine Production/Availability August-December

  • 75 Covishield
  • 55 Covaxin
  • 30 Biological E Subunit vaccine
  • 5 Zydus Cadila DNA vaccine
  • 20 Serum Institute of India바카라Novavax
  • 10 Bharat Biotech nasal vaccine
  • 6 Gennova mRNA vaccine
  • 15 Sputnik V

Doses (in crores)

216 Total

Source: Government of India

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