As the nation enters the third part of its Covid vaccination drive, AIIMS chief Dr Randeep Guleria mentioned the necessity of the hour is to inoculate extra individuals and steadily confide in cowl decrease age teams — however this must be balanced with the provision of vaccines.
Speaking at The Indian Express Idea Exchange e-event Friday, Guleria mentioned: “We are a very large country and if we were to say that we would want to vaccinate the entire adult population for which the vaccine has been currently approved, then that would mean close to one billion people. We will need two billion doses and there is no way that we could get two billion doses if we have to open it up for everyone.”
According to Guleria, the problem is to stability the doses obtainable “with the number of people we can vaccinate based on the priority list”.
“So what I think one needs to do is to see how the trend is and if you find that after a week or 10 days, the number of people coming for vaccination are falling, open it up for a lower age group and gradually do that. There are people in the lower age group who are wanting to be vaccinated whereas others who are in the older age group meet the criteria but still are reluctant and not willing to take the vaccine but are holding up the line,” he mentioned.
The vaccination drive, which kicked off on January 16, has been witnessing a lukewarm response with a number of states nonetheless not having the ability to meet the goal of inoculating their healthcare and frontline employees.
“On Thursday, we opened up the vaccination for 45 years and above and we received a huge response. At AIIMS, Delhi we have five vaccination sites and normally we do 100 per site and on an average we vaccinate 600 beneficiaries daily. On Thursday, we vaccinated 996 people and we thought we would cross the 1000 mark. But these are early days, if this continues then we are in a very good position. But let’s say after 10 days we see only 50% of the people coming, that means we are reaching a saturation point for those who want to get themselves vaccinated. So maybe we should lower the age group now,” Guleria mentioned.
According to the AIIMS chief, it ought to be obligatory for healthcare employees straight concerned in affected person care to take the shot. “When we look at the data from our hospital, 50% of healthcare workers have not come forward. Unlike the general public, there is more vaccine hesitancy in the healthcare workers because of the reading and worrying about the things that don’t matter. I have argued with them that the drive is not for them but for their patients. It should be mandatory for all the healthcare working in the hospital for the safety of their patients,” Guleria mentioned.