Good Morning Dear Mumbai Multimedia Studio Reader,
Today, July 9th 2021 - A thorough survey conducted by Mumbai Multimedia Studio - It only took a matter of months for India’s precariously perched vaccine dominos to fall. When India announced its vaccination drive in January, the news brought optimism and hope. The country had two domestic sources for vaccines: Serum Institute, which manufactures Covishield, and Bharat Biotech, which makes Covaxin. There was talk of bringing in other vaccines as well—Moderna, Pfizer, Johnson & Johnson, Sputnik V. But nearly six months and a deadly second wave of Covid - later, that hope has been replaced with desperation.
Since May, Indians have spent much of their time clicking away on laptops and mobile phones, hoping to snag a vaccination slot. They built APIs and city-wide messaging groups to alert each other to available slots, and lined up at public health centres repeatedly only to be turned away.
Vaccines just weren’t available. Not only did the government not place enough orders on time, India’s domestic Covid vaccine manufacturers also faltered on their commitments.
According to numbers sourced from India’s health ministry, of the promised 100 million doses of Covishield to be supplied by SII in the quarter ended March 2021, close to 3,300,000 doses did not materialise. In the same quarter, Bharat Biotech fell short of its Covaxin commitments as well. The Hyderabad-based company promised 20 million doses; there was a shortfall of 1,836,840 doses.
Faced with this shortfall, Russia’s Sputnik V vaccine was seen as a saving grace. It was meant to be a stop-gap till the other vaccines materialised. Nearly three months on from gaining regulatory approval, however, Sputnik V is proving a difficult beast to tame. Dr Reddy’s Laboratories, the vaccine’s brand custodian in India, signed up for 250 million doses, expecting to import 35 million-odd doses by May. Only a few hundred thousand doses have arrived, trickling in at a snail’s pace. Much of this stock is lying in cold storage, as India has received far more first doses than second doses—the two have different viral vectors.
Owing to this complication, Sputnik is also proving difficult to manufacture in India. Meanwhile, the other foreign vaccines remain out of reach of Indians; pharma majors are pushing for indemnity in case of adverse events caused by their vaccines.
While the government has placed orders for two more vaccines, India’s vaccine situation remains precarious—symptomatic of India’s vaccination drive that has proven to be a case of over-promising and under-delivering... #yusufbhandarkar #digitalmarketingagency www.multimediastudio.net
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