Oxfam India And FMES Welcomes PM's Announcement on Vaccines

Oxfam India And FMES Welcomes PM's Announcement on Vaccines

  • By Oxfam India
  • 09 Jun, 2021

                                                           PRESS RELEASE 

Oxfam India And Forum For Medical Ethics Society Welcomes PM's Announcement For Partial Free Vaccines; Highlights Need For More Inclusive Vaccine Policy

More efforts are required on vaccine equity to speed up the vaccination process

New Delhi, June 9:  Oxfam India and Forum for Medical Ethics Society (FMES) welcome Prime Minister Narendra Modi's decision to procure 75% of vaccines in India and providing them free of cost to the states. The latest decision is in line with the demands of the People's Vaccine Alliance in India which submitted a letter endorsed by over 600 prominent activists, doctors and citizens to the Prime Minister on May 17. We welcome the commitment to free delivery, central procurement of the vaccine, a partial price cap in private hospitals and the extension of the Pradhan Mantri Garib Kayan Ann Yojana.  However, People’s Vaccine Alliance wants to reiterate that the new vaccine policy is far from universal and accessible. 

Government efforts fail to ensure free vaccination for all by reserving 25% of India’s vaccine supply for the rich.

25% of the vaccine supplies will continue to be available for private hospitals. This policy will skew distribution to urban elites given that 80% of doses administered in the private sector in May were distributed in Delhi NCR, Mumbai Metro, Bengaluru and Hyderabad alone. Indeed, 50% of vaccine doses were monopolized by only 9 hospitals. While, the Central Government's decision to direct states to cap service charges in private hospitals at Rs.150 is appreciated, People's Vaccine Alliance urges the Prime Minister to address pandemic profiteering and declare 100% centralised procurement of the vaccine for equitable distribution.

Transparency in the distribution of vaccines to the states and UTs

Oxfam India CEO Amitabh Behar said, “Successful vaccination drives are rooted in detailed district plans and social mobilisation strategies to reach vulnerable communities; these are missing in the COVID-vaccination drive this time around.  India needs to start maintaining disaggregated records of people vaccinated by income, social group and gender to allow us to understand the gap in the extent of vaccination of India’s rich and poor and its Dalits, Adivasis and minorities; men and women.”

Only 15% rural households have access to the Internet and only 24% of India’s population has smartphones making the current vaccination enrolment strategy discriminatory. The near complete reliance on on-line appointments for vaccination without providing walk-in facilities for those under 45 tends to exclude those who lack internet access, the elderly living alone, those with disability and populations such as homeless and pavement dwellers and those in institutions and women. A more targeted bottom-up approach is needed to ensure vaccination nearer to peoples’ habitations, especially in high coronavirus prevalence areas. Vaccine slot registrations through offline modes and phone calls or SMS should be encouraged considering the deep digital divide in the country. 

Sunita Sheel, General Secretary of Forum for Medical Ethics Society said, “We lost critical six-seven weeks impacting adversely equitable access to vaccine across states due to the Center’s earlier decision to discard a tested approach of centralized procurement of vaccines. Now that the decision is reversed, it is crucial that vaccine distribution across states is informed by epidemiological evidence as opposed to ad-hoc allocation of dosages to eliminate influence and interference of non-scientific factors. This requires meaningful all-state consultation on an ongoing basis and scientific advisors to states to engage with the ‘moving target’ of statewise needs. Only and only an evidence-based response will help us out of the pandemic.”.

Furthermore, with gaps in vaccination rates opening up among states, there is need for greater transparency in the distribution of vaccines to the states by the central government. Reports suggest, Gujarat alone had 60% of the entire country's vaccines on May 1 for 18-44 age group; consequently, several states complained to the Prime Minister about inequitable distribution.

Regulation of pandemic profiteering by vaccine manufactures and doing more to address root causes of vaccine shortage

India's global leadership in the push for a TRIPS waiver on COVID vaccine is important not just for ensuring domestic vaccine production, but also globally. The limitations of closed-door IP protected bilateral tech transfer partnerships between pharmaceuticals have been demonstrated by the AstraZeneca with SII that have failed to deliver universal vaccination, but have allowed for profits of as high as 750-2000% per dose by vaccine manufacturers. A price cap of INR 150 as service charges for private hospitals will have limited impact until profiteering is addressed at source. It is time for India to enhance transparency in the agreements with vaccine manufacturers, take steps to keep the vaccine not-for-profit and must do all that is required for enabling compulsory licensing to ramp up vaccine manufacturing.

 


Related Stories

Education

20 Feb, 2022

Muzaffarnagar, Uttar Pradesh

Village Backs Mohalla Classes

As all Mohalla Classes, the one in Bhaisani village too started with the sole aim to bridge the learning gap and to ensure that children, who lost two precious years of school, can be mainstreamed into formal schooling. Thirty children have been coming to the Mohalla Classes for the last two months. Of the 30, 19 are girls and 11 are boys. The Classes are continuing with regular school.
Read More

Education

18 Feb, 2022

Nalanda, Bihar

Making Students Computer Savvy

Oxfam India-HDFC stepped in with the installation of Smart Classes/Digital Learning Lab. Under this initiative, computers were installed to make government schools more computer-savvy; these were installed in three schools—Middle School in Indaut Village, Middle School in Rampur Village and the Senior Secondary School in Amar Village—in Nalanda District. Each Smart Class has six computers powered with solar energy. Computer teachers from local computer coaching centers were hired to train students and teacher; the trainers undertook a 52-hour course that were designed by the NIIT Foundation.
Read More

Women Livelihood

09 Feb, 2022

Nalanda, Bihar

Sangita’s Shop

With monetary support from the Oxfam India-HDFC initiative, Sangita Devi has enhanced and taken over the once part-time grocery shop from her husband and is now running it full time. She has added a cosmetics section and plans to do more in the days to come. She is earning INR 3000 every month from the shop.
Read More

Women Livelihood

03 Feb, 2022

Koraput, Odisha

For Vegetable Farmer Bati Hantal, Age Is Just A Number

Bati Hantal is one enthusiastic farmer. At 65 not only has she diversified her farming practices and increased her farm income, she is also an inspiration and a driving force for women farmers in her village, her SHG, and her Farmer Producer Group. The Oxfam India-SDMC Trust project, with support from NGOs WORD and Prastutee, was started in the Semiliguda and Pottangi blocks of Koraput in February 2021. The project aimed at strengthening 2000 economically vulnerable, and small and marginal women farmers from the tribal communities.
Read More

img Become an Oxfam Supporter, Sign Up Today One of the most trusted non-profit organisations in India