Tag: Coronavirus Outbreak

  • With domestic manufacturing picking up pace, India unlikely to buy Pfizer, Moderna vaccines for now: Sources

    By PTI

    NEW DELHI: India is unlikely to buy Pfizer and Moderna COVID-19 vaccines for now as the domestic manufacturing of anti-coronavirus jabs has picked up pace, sources said with the total doses administered in the country crossing 83 crore on Wednesday.

    Though there is no official word, the sources said the government is not ready to give in to the indemnity demands of the US drug manufacturers against liabilities in case of adverse effects.

    The Pune-based pharmaceutical company Serum Institute of India has enhanced the manufacturing capacity of Covishield to more than 20 crore doses per month and has informed the Centre that it will be able to supply around 22 crore doses in October.

    Also, Bharat Biotech is currently producing nearly 3 crores doses of Covaxin each month and its production is likely to be ramped up to 5 crores in the coming months.

    “In the initial days of the vaccination drive, there was requirement of jabs, but that has been met with the ramping up of domestic production. Also, these indigenously produced vaccines are much more affordable and do not have special cold chain requirements,” a source told PTI.

    Union Health Minister Mansukh Mandaviya on Monday announced that India will resume export of surplus COVID-19 vaccines in the fourth quarter of 2021 under the ‘Vaccine Maitri’ programme and to meet its commitment to the COVAX global pool, but vaccinating its own citizens remains the topmost priority of the government.

    Talking about the expected production and supply trends in the coming months, he said the government will receive over 30 crore doses of COVID-19 vaccines in October and over 100 crore doses in the coming quarter from October-December.

    The cumulative doses administered in the country so far under the nationwide COVID-19 vaccination drive has exceeded 83 crore.

    According to official sources, over 22 per cent of India’s adult population have received both doses of vaccine and 65 per cent have got at least one dose.

    Of all the vaccine doses administered, around 88.45 per cent are Covishield, nearly 11.44 per cent Covaxin and less than one per cent Sputnik V.

    India on September 17 administered a record number of over 2.50 crore vaccine doses on the occasion of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s 71st birthday.

    The daily COVID-19 vaccination in the country was over 1 crore on September 6, August 31 and August 27.

    India took 85 days to touch the 10-crore vaccination mark, 45 more days to cross the 20-crore mark and 29 more days to reach the 30-crore mark, according to the ministry.

    The country took 24 days to reach 40 crore from 30 crore doses and then 20 more days to cross the 50-crore vaccination mark on August 6, it said.

    It took 19 more days to go past the 60-crore mark and took only 13 days to reach 70 crore from 60 crore on September 7.

    It then took just 11 days to reach 80 crore from 70 crore.

  • India warns of reciprocal measures if UK does not address concerns on travel rules related to COVID-19 vaccination

    By PTI

    NEW DELHI: India on Tuesday warned of “reciprocal measures” if the UK does not address its concerns over the new travel rules relating to COVID-19 vaccine certification with Foreign Secretary Harsh Vardhan Shringla describing these norms as “discriminatory”.

    External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar also took up the issue of Covishield-vaccinated travellers being required to quarantine in the UK with newly-appointed British Foreign Secretary Elizabeth Truss at a meeting in New York.

    “The basic issue is that here is a vaccine, Covishield, which is a licensed product of the UK company, manufactured in India of which we have supplied five million doses to the UK at the request of the government of the UK.

    “We understand that this is being used under the national health system, and, therefore, non-recognition of Covishield is a discriminatory policy and does impact those of our citizens travelling to the UK,” Shringla said at a media briefing here.

    Official sources said India will definitely take reciprocal measures against travellers from the UK if its concerns relating to the vaccine certification are not addressed by October 4, when the new rules will come into effect.

    The foreign secretary said he has been told that certain “assurances” were being given by the UK that the issue will be resolved.

    “We have also offered to some of the partner countries the option of mutual recognition of vaccination certificates. But these are reciprocal measures. We have to see how it goes. But if we do not get satisfaction we would be within our rights to impose reciprocal measures,” Shringla said.

    According to the new rules announced by the UK, Indian travellers who have received both doses of the Covishield vaccine manufactured by the Serum Institute of India (SII) will be considered unvaccinated and will have to undergo self-isolation for 10 days.

    Developed by researchers at the University of Oxford and pharma giant AstraZeneca, Covishield is one of the two anti-COVID vaccines used by India — Bharat Biotech’s Covaxin being the other –in its vaccination drive across the country.

    The new rules have drawn sharp criticism in India with the opposition Congress urging the government to immediately intervene and ensure that there is no inconvenience faced by Indian travellers.

    It is learnt that New Delhi has already issued a note verbale to the UK on the matter.

    In the meeting with Truss, the external affairs minister raised the issue with her and called for resolving it at the earliest to mutual satisfaction.

    “Urged early resolution of quarantine issue in mutual interest,” Jaishankar tweeted after the meeting.

    From October 4, the current “traffic light system” of red, amber, green countries based on levels of COVID-19 risk will be replaced by one red list of countries.

    The scrapping of an amber list, which is what India is currently on, means reduced PCR test cost burden only for some travellers.

    The expanded list of countries whose vaccines are recognised in the UK does not include India.

    It means Indians vaccinated with Covishield would be required to undergo compulsory PCR tests as well as self-isolation.

    The British High Commission on Monday said it is engaging with India to explore how it could expand recognition of Covid-19 vaccine certification issued by Indian authorities.

    “The UK is committed to opening up international travel again as soon as is practicable and this announcement is a further step to enable people to travel more freely again, in a safe and sustainable way, while protecting public health,” a spokesperson of the High Commission said.

    “We are engaging with the Government of India to explore how we could expand UK recognition of vaccine certification to people vaccinated by a relevant public health body in India,” the official added.

    Former union ministers and Congress leaders Jairam Ramesh, Anand Sharma and Shashi Tharoor have slammed the UK’s travel policy, with Ramesh saying it “smacks of racism”.

  • Board exams: CBSE not to charge registration or exam fees from students who have lost parents to COVID-19

    By PTI

    NEW DELHI: Students appearing for Class 10 and 12 board exams next year will not have to pay any registration or examination fees if they have lost their parents due to the COVID-19 pandemic, according to the Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE).

    “The COVID-19 pandemic has impacted the country adversely and keeping in view its impact on students, CBSE, as a special measure for the academic session 2021-22, has decided that neither the examination fees nor the registration fees will be charged by the Board from the students who have lost both parents or surviving parent or legal guardian or adoptive parents due to COVID-19 pandemic,” CBSE Examination Controller Sanyam Bhardwaj said.

    “The schools while submitting the list of candidates for class 10 and 12 examinations will provide the details of these students after verifying the genuineness,” he added.

  • Engaged with India on COVID-19 vaccine certification: UK

    By PTI

    NEW DELHI: The UK on Monday said it is engaging with India to explore how it could expand the recognition of the COVID-19 vaccine certification issued by Indian authorities amid criticism of the new British travel rules.

    The comments by a spokesperson in the British High Commission here came amid concerns in India over the latest Covid-related travel restrictions announced by the United Kingdom.

    According to new rules, Indian travellers who have received both doses of the Covishield vaccine manufactured by the Serum Institute of India (SII) will be considered unvaccinated and will have to undergo self-isolation for 10 days.

    Asked about the concerns in India over the new rules that will come into effect from October 4, the British High Commission spokesperson said the UK is engaged with India on the issue and is committed to opening up international travel again “as soon as is practicable”.

    “The UK is committed to opening up international travel again as soon as is practicable and this announcement is a further step to enable people to travel more freely again, in a safe and sustainable way, while protecting public health,” the spokesperson said.

    “We are engaging with the Government of India to explore how we could expand the UK recognition of vaccine certification to people vaccinated by a relevant public health body in India,” the official added.

    From October 4, the current “traffic light system” of red, amber, green countries based on levels of COVID-19 risk will be replaced by one red list of countries.

    The scrapping of the amber list, which is what India is currently on, means a reduced PCR test cost burden only for some travellers.

    The expanded list of countries whose vaccines are recognised in the UK does not include India.

    It means Indians vaccinated with Covishield, the SII-produced Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine, would be required to undergo compulsory PCR tests as well as self-isolation.

    People familiar with the development said the UK has kept visa rules under constant review throughout the pandemic to keep borders open, while gradually and safely restarting travel.

    “The UK will continue to review the scientific evidence on other vaccines and keep the health measures under regular review,” said one of the persons cited above.

    The people said visa applications from Indian travellers for all categories continue to be processed and they do not need to be vaccinated to travel to the UK.

    They said regardless of an Indian national’s vaccination status, the person travelling from India to the UK must take a pre-departure test and a COVID-19 test on or before day two of the visit, and on or after day eight, and self-isolate for 10 days.

    Travellers can also choose to shorten their home quarantine period to around five days under the “Test to Release” service, the people said.

  • COVID may be heading towards endemicity in India, local flare-ups may form third wave: Vaccinologist

    Dr Gangandeep Kang stressed on the need for developing better vaccines that can deal with new variants of COVID.

  • UP: Certificate shows local BJP leader given five doses of COVID vaccine, sixth scheduled

    By PTI

    MEERUT: The vaccination certificate of a BJP booth level leader here wrongly shows he has been given five doses of the coronavirus vaccine and is scheduled for the sixth, with officials saying it appears to be a case of “mischief” and conspiracy.

    The case was reported from Sardhana area of the district after Rampal Singh (73), who says he is the BJP president of booth no 79 and is also a member of the Hindu Yuva Vahini, got his vaccination certificate downloaded.

    He said the certificate shows he has been given five doses of the coronavirus vaccine and the sixth is also scheduled.

    He accused the health department of negligence and filed a complaint following which, the officials said, a probe has been launched.

    Singh said he got his first dose of the vaccine on March 16 and the second on May 8.

    However, when he got his certificate downloaded from the official portal, it showed five jabs already administered and the sixth scheduled between December 2021 and January 2022.

    He said the certificate shows his first dose on March 16, the second on May 8, the third on May 15 and both fourth and fifth on September 15.

    When contacted, Chief Medical Officer Akhilesh Mohan said this maybe a first case of somebody being registered more than two times for the vaccine.

    “Prime facie, it is case of mischief and conspiracy,” he told PTI.

    “Some mischievous elements seem to have hacked into the portal and done this.”

    He said the district immunisation officer Praveen Gautam has been asked to probe the matter.

  • Setting a record, India administers over two crore COVID-19 vaccine doses on PM Narendra Modi’s birthday

    By PTI

    NEW DELHI: India set a record on Friday by administering over two crore COVID-19 vaccine doses, in a major push to the inoculation drive on the occasion of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s birthday.

    The cumulative doses administered in the country reached 2,03,68,343 at 5.27 pm, according to data on the Co-WIN portal.

    The total number of doses administered in the country has crossed 78.72 crore.

    “A gift to the prime minister on behalf of health workers and people of the country. On the birthday of Prime Minister Narendra Modi today, India has crossed the historic figure of administering 2 crore vaccine doses in a day, setting a new record. Well done India!” Union Health Minister Mansukh Mandaviya tweeted in Hindi.

    The daily vaccinations crossed the one-crore mark for the fourth time in less than a month.

    Mandaviya said this is the fastest pace at which one crore doses have been administered.

    “On PM @Narendra Modi Ji’s birthday, till 1:30 pm, the country has crossed the mark of 1 crore vaccines, the fastest so far, and we are continuously moving forward. I believe that today we will all make a new record of vaccination and give it as a gift to the prime minister,” he said in a tweet in Hindi earlier along with the hashtags “VaccineSeva” and “HappyBdayModiji”.

    The daily COVID-19 vaccination in the country was over 1 crore on September 6, August 31 and August 27.

    Mandaviya on Thursday had called for a major push to the COVID-19 vaccination drive during Prime Minister Modi’s birthday on Friday, saying it would be the perfect gift for him.

    The BJP has asked its units across the country to help get a large number of people vaccinated on the occasion.

    India took 85 days to touch the 10-crore vaccination mark, 45 more days to cross the 20-crore mark and 29 more days to reach the 30-crore mark, according to the ministry.

    The country took 24 days to reach 40 crore from 30 crore doses and then 20 more days to cross the 50-crore vaccination mark on August 6, it said.

    It took 19 more days to go past the 60-crore mark and took only 13 days to reach 70 crore from 60 crore on September 7, the ministry said.

    The total number of doses administered crossed the 75-crore mark on September 13.

    The countrywide vaccination drive was rolled out on January 16 with healthcare workers (HCWs) getting inoculated in the first phase.

    The vaccination of frontline workers (FLWs) started from February 2.

    The next phase of COVID-19 vaccination commenced from March 1 for people over 60 years of age and those aged 45 and above with specified co-morbid conditions.

    The country launched vaccination for all people aged more than 45 years from April 1.

    The government then decided to expand its vaccination drive by allowing everyone above 18 to be vaccinated from May 1.

  • Vaccinating eligible people in poll-bound Uttar Pradesh, Punjab with at least one dose government’s priority: Sources

    By PTI

    NEW DELHI: Administering at least one dose of COVID-19 vaccine to the eligible population in states like Uttar Pradesh and Punjab where assembly elections are scheduled to be held next year is on the priority list of the government, according to official sources.

    Also, the target of a landmark 100 crore Covid vaccination doses is likely to be completed by the second week of October, Union health ministry sources said on Friday.

    “Inoculating eligible people in states like Uttar Pradesh and Punjab where assembly elections are to be held next year with at least one dose of COVID-19 vaccine is on the priority list of the government,” a source said.

    The cumulative COVID-19 vaccine doses administered in the country crossed 78 crore on Friday.

    The government said 20 per cent of India’s adult population have received both doses of COVID-19 vaccine and 62 per cent have got at least one dose.

    Of all the vaccines used, around 87.8 per cent are Covishield manufactured by Serum Institute, around 12.11 per cent are Bharat Biotech’s Covaxin and less than one per cent Sputnik V.

    At least 50 per cent of the beneficiaries have been administered the first dose in Uttar Pradesh.

    The target is to cover the 100 per cent eligible population with at least one shot before the polls, the sources said.

    Commenting about the delay of Pfizer and Moderna’s Covid vaccines in India, the sources said change in the demands of the manufacturers from time to time is leading to delay in making these vaccines available in the country and as to why they have not been given indemnity.

  • Jimmy Kimmel says unvaccinated COVID patients don’t deserve ICU beds

    By IANS

    LOS ANGELES: Popular TV host Jimmy Kimmel has mocked unvaccinated people in addition to talking about how they should be treated at hospitals, on an episode of his show ‘Jimmy Kimmel Live!’

    In the Tuesday night September 7 episode, Kimmel said: “It was not a fun Labor Day weekend COVID-wise.”

    In his monologue, he noted the increase in coronavirus cases, reports aceshowbiz.com.

    “Dr. Fauci said if hospitals get any more overcrowded they’re going to have to make some very tough choices about who gets an ICU bed.”

    Talking about who he thinks deserves ICU beds, the 53-year-old TV personality continued: “That choice doesn’t seem so tough to me. Vaccinated persons having a heart attack? Yes, come right in, we’ll take care of you. Unvaccinated guy who gobbled horse goo? Rest in peace, wheezy.”

    In the episode, Kimmel also talked about ivermectin, which many conservative talk show hosts, Republican politicians and even some physicians claimed to be useful to be used against the virus.

    Merck, the company behind ivermectic, however, released a statement in which it says that the drug is not an effective treatment for COVID-19.

    “We’ve still got a lot of pan-dimwits out there. People are still taking this ivermectin. The poison control center has seen a spike in calls from people taking this livestock medicine to fight the coronavirus, but they won’t take the vaccine. It’s like if you’re a vegan and you’re like, ‘No, I don’t want a hamburger, give me that can of Alpo instead’,” he said.

    Concluding his monologue that night, the host thanked the slew of guest hosts who filled in for him while he was on vacation. Among those who temporarily took over his hosting duties were Wanda Sykes, David Spade, Nick Kroll and Julie Bowen.

  • Coronavirus not gone yet, shall not let our guards down: President Ram Nath Kovind

    By PTI

    NEW DELHI: President Ram Nath Kovind on Saturday said the country is yet to come out of the devastating effects of coronavirus recurrence this year and that this is the time of extra care and caution.

    “We shall not let our guard down. Vaccines are the best possible protection science offers to us,” he said, addressing the nation on the eve of India’s 75th Independence Day.

    He said the second wave brought the country’s public healthcare infrastructure under stress.

    The reality is that no infrastructure, even of advanced economies, could withstand a crisis of such enormous proportions, Kovind said.

    “Efforts were made on war-footing to plug the gaps. The leadership rose to the challenge, and the government’s endeavours were supplemented by initiatives of the states, private sector healthcare facilities, the civil society and others,” he said.

    The intensity of the pandemic has come down, but the coronavirus has not yet gone away, Kovind warned.

    “We are yet to come out of the devastating effects of its recurrence this year. Last year, with exceptional efforts from all, we had succeeded in bringing the spread of infections under control. Our scientists had succeeded in developing vaccines in a very short time,” the President said.

    He said due to the new variants and other unexpected factors, the country suffered from a terrible second wave.

    “I am deeply sad that many lives could not be saved and many more suffered immensely in this phase of an unprecedented crisis. I speak for the whole nation when I say that I share the grief of all the affected families with the same intensity,” Kovind said.

    The science is coping with this invisible enemy of terrible might with remarkable speed, he said.

    “We can take solace from the fact that more lives have been saved than the lives lost. It was our collective determination to overcome the challenge that helped us see the weakening of the second wave. Once again, our corona warriors, the doctors, nurses and health workers, the administrators, and others, risked everything to contain the impact of the second wave,” Kovind said.

    In this extraordinary mission, foreign nations shared the essentials generously, just as India had reached out to many nations with medicine, equipment and vaccines, the President said.

    Due to these efforts, the nation breathes a sigh of relief with the return of a semblance of normalcy, he said.

    “If we have learned our lessons well, we know that this is the time of extra care and caution. We shall not let our guard down. Vaccines are the best possible protection science offers to us,” Kovind said.

    “Under the world’s biggest vaccination campaign going on in our country, more than 50 crore fellow citizens have been vaccinated so far. I urge all eligible citizens who are yet to get vaccinated to do so at the earliest and also inspire others,” he said.

    Kovind said the economic impact of the pandemic is as disastrous as its health impact.

    The government has been concerned about the lower-middle classes and the poor as well as about small and medium industries, he said.

    It has been sensitive to the needs of the labourers and of employers who have been facing hardships due to the lockdowns and movement restrictions, Kovind said.

    This year also, the government had distributed food grains to about 80 crore people in May and June, he said, adding that “this benefit has been extended till Diwali”.

    “Moreover, the government has announced a new stimulus package worth Rs 6 lakh 28 thousand crore to boost the selected Covid-affected sectors.

    In particular, it is heartening to note that an amount of Rs 23 thousand 220 crore is being spent over one year for expansion of medical facilities,” Kovind said.

    It is heartening to note that rural India, particularly the agriculture sector, has kept growing against all odds, he said.

    “The series of agricultural marketing reforms will empower our ‘annadata’ farmers and help them get better price for their produce,” Kovind said.