back to top
OpinionsRefine the Covid-19 vaccination strategy

Refine the Covid-19 vaccination strategy

Date:

Rajinder Dhamija

 

Research has shown that the pandemic has disproportionately affected regions witha high per capita income and a high burden of NCDs

Delhi had its first Covid-19 case this week, last year. Over this period, India has been able to keep the number of new cases, transmission rates as well as deaths at relatively lower levels, compared to many developed nations with better public health systems. Till recently, we have also seen a dip in infection rates in many parts of the country.

Having said that, the pandemic is not over until it is actually over. In fact, we need to be extra cautious during the downward trend of number of new cases, just as we would during the descent after scaling peaks. Pandemics also behave in set patterns in terms of trajectory. I wrote last June, that Covid-19 is no exception and there will be multiple peaks and we need to prepare our health systems for these surges. Even as the brutal first wave of the pandemic waned, numbers have begun rising again. With the opening of borders and travel, it is, also, almost impossible to stop newer variants from entering India.

As we enter into the second year of Covid-19 pandemic, we do have reasons to be optimistic. The momentous scientific achievement of past 12 months has been the development, testing, scrutiny, and approval of vaccines in the shortest possible timeline. Vaccination is the single-most important strategy to end the Covid 19 pandemic. Despite the appearance of multiple SARS-CoV-2 variants as well as general vaccine hesitancy, vaccines provides a real measure of hope. The benefits of vaccination far outweigh the rare but possible risks as per our present understanding.

Though there has been steady progress with 's largest vaccination campaign in India, which began in mid-January, there is still a long way before it achieves targets. Since the vaccination roll out drive began at a time of falling infection rates, it gave us a crucial window to get the better of the virus quickly. The experience from the West shows that the second, or subsequent, waves are usually more pronounced.

The second phase of roll out, which began this week, is a welcome and commendable step towards expanding the availability of vaccine as well as making it available at affordable rates in the private sector. The rationale behind who we vaccinate, and in which order, is crucial to achieve the goal of vaccinating maximum number of people at risk and towards achieving vaccine-induced herd immunity. Since there is no issue of lack of intent, effort, or resources, an alternative approach should be explored which may turn out to be complementary to the existing strategy.

One of these is vaccine deployment based on burden and severity of Covid-19 in different states in India. There have been major state-level differences in the burden and mortality from Covid-19 owing to the large size and the heterogeneous population of our country. As some of us reported in a recent paper “Macrolevel association of COVID-19 with non-communicable disease risk factors in India” published in Diabetes & Metabolic Syndrome: Clinical Research & Reviews, the more urbanised states in India have greater a higher proportionate case burden and mortality from Covid-19 than rural ones. Greater Covid-19 related mortality has also been reported among persons with various non-communicable diseases (NCDs). Our paper was based on an analysis of cumulative and weekly and state-level data on Covid-19 cases and deaths from a publicly available database. This was correlated with health care related factors and social variables.

The study covered at least 9.5 million Covid-19 cases and 135,000 deaths reported in India from March 2 till the end of November 2020. While the national burden of cases and deaths is 6900/million and 100.4/ million respectively, there were wide disparities in rates of cases and deaths across states, with reported cases of more than 20,000/million in states of Delhi and Goa and 10,000-20,000/million in a number of states. Similarly deaths rates of more than 300/million are observed in Delhi (490), Goa (434) and Maharashtra (383). The case-fatality rate also showed significant differences, with less than 0.5% in Mizoram, Arunachal Pradesh, Kerala and Assam to more than 2% in , Maharashtra and Sikkim.

Data on various state-level demographic indices also showed wide variability. There was significant positive correlation of state-level Covid-19 cases and deaths per million, respectively, with epidemiological transition index (0.59, 0.44), literacy (0.46, 0.46), indices of health care availability (0.23, 0.18), health care accessibility and quality (0.71, 0.61), urbanisation (0.75, 0.73) and human development (0.61, 0.56). These figures reveal that just as our population is aging and the disease profile is changing from infectious diseases to lifestyle ones (which is the essence of the epidemiological transition index), the pandemic is also showing a similar trend with states with a high per capita income, and a high burden of these non communicable diseases, displaying a high burden of Covid-19.

Our analysis conclusively shows that in India, the more urbanised and better developed states have greater burden and mortality from Covid-19 and need vaccinations earlier than other states. This study also reaffirms that the pandemic in India is still an urban phenomenon. In countries with a similar profile — a larger proportion of rural population — including China, Brazil, Iran, Mexico and South Africa, reports have highlighted a similar predominantly urban nature of the disease. This has important implications for implementation of population and individual level preventive measures and equitable vaccine deployment.

A judicious strategy targeted at the urban population, especially the vulnerable, could be the most appropriate intervention. My suggestion is that such states, including Kerala, Delhi, Maharashtra and Tamil Nadu should get priority in the vaccination drive. This re-prioritisation of vaccine deployment may well be an alternative way out of the pandemic and help us return to a semblance of normalcy across the country soon.

Rajinder K Dhamija is the head of neurology department, Lady Hardinge Medical College and SSK Hospital , New Delhi. He was, formerly, a WHO Fellow at National Institute of Epidemiology.

The views expressed are personal

Northlines
Northlines
The Northlines is an independent source on the Web for news, facts and figures relating to Jammu, Kashmir and Ladakh and its neighbourhood.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Share post:

Popular

More like this
Related

BYJU’S MAY PAY APRIL SALARY TO EMPLOYEES THIS WEEK

By Peerzada Abrar Cash-strapped edtech firm Byju’s is likely to...

Biden’s “Xenophobic” label for India and Japan is a costly mistake

By Girish Linganna US President Joe Biden is receiving criticism...

Strawberry Cultivation as a Diversification Strategy in Small Holdings of Ramban

Dr. Parveen Kumar Dr. Raj Kumar Agriculture landscapes in hilly regions...

TIME TO CURB FAKE VIDEOS IN ELECTIONS

A deepfake video of Union Home Minister Amit Shah...