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Quick Take Opinions & Insights | The HinduBusinessLine

Budget delivers a muted bang Quick Take: Why the stock markets cheered, while bond markets sulked post Budget Dealing with invasion of locusts Dealing with invasion of locusts Of human bondage Don’t shoot the messenger Deplorable attempt to gag the media Time to rethink sale of Air India Making a circus of a global pandemic No durable solutions in YES Bank rescue RBI’s right in using non-conventional tools to combat Covid Why the markets were miffed with the Budget Govt, media and Arnab Striking at concentration of power India really needed a Chief of Defence Staff State power on overdrive in Jamia Millia Stimulus package: A tricky tangle Bharat Bond ETF: For the savvy investor Govt must reduce drafting errors in Bills introduced Lenders to Karvy are being unreasonable Intriguing moves in Pakistan establishment Sell Air India in a prudent fashion, don’t shut it Why have private petrol pumps not come up? Supreme Court rules correctly on Maharashtra crisis IT sector needs to get more ‘agile’ Serious slowdown calls for demand-side steps NRC is set for a quiet burial, and that’s for the good PSU disinvestment: Strategically right Is the worst over for the auto sector? Telecom tariff hike will undermine Digital India plan Tangled web Bringing CJI under RTI, a welcome move Who Will Govern the Governors? Can Kartarpur corridor ease tensions between India and Pak? Moody blues for Indian economy Falling demand for gold is good for the economy AIF rescue: Devil in the details Regulator for e-commerce in India: Licence raj redux? Delhi police protest: Mutiny in the Ranks The last word has not been said on the NRC Stop playing political games in Maharashtra Something’s burning: North India’s smog, a cauldron of faulty policies Trump likely to survive impeachment and gain from it Sensex all-time high at odds with macro-reality Risky A320neo aircraft of IndiGo, GoAir should be grounded immediately Baghdadi’s death not necessarily the end of ISIS All women spacewalk: A giant leap for womankind ‘Green crackers’ — there aren’t too many of them Right move to revive BSNL, MTNL Forget US Congress criticism on Kashmir; India must do the right thing Regulate the Web, don’t wreck it with control A transport strike in Telangana that needlessly boiled over Effects of cow slaughter ban show up in livestock census Regrettable gag order on Andhra Pradesh media PSU workers don’t deserve to be abandoned; they need ‘tough love’ Revise fisc numbers in the wake of slowdown Hidden from plain sight Before the switch Let consumer interest decide e-commerce policies Strategic sticking points between China and India How oxygen can help fight diseases Thumbs up from RSS Faceless Scrutiny Revive BSNL at the earliest Dip in GST collections tells a story No mistaking China’s superpower status Why another omnibus national ID card? Know your onions Wework episode should serve as a wake-up call for analysts and investors Tread with caution while framing rules for social media Jumping the gun To be meaningful, #HowdyModi has to go beyond optics E-cigarettes ban: Bolting the stable when the horses are still in Hindi as sole national language is an idea which militates against India’s pluralist unity in diversity Rupee skids to 71.5 on oil Quiet Please Tabrez Ansari lynching case: Rein In The Mobs Budget 2019: Why is the market miffed?
Epidemic indifference
2019-11-15 · via Quick Take Opinions & Insights | The HinduBusinessLine

The death of an eight-year-old girl, Anju, this August after denial of anti-rabies vaccine at Agra’s Sarojini Naidu Medical College (SNMC) is followed by the admission by Health Ministry that fatality rate for rabies in India is 100 per cent. Although the circumstance of Anju’s death is particularly Kafkaesque and macabre — the officer at the Community Health Centre, where she was first taken, refused to allow administration of anti-rabies vaccine because the child had no Aadhaar card — in reality, it only signifies the routine functioning of India’s health bureaucracy. As per the Health Ministry’s own admission, all the 110 reported rabies patients in 2018 died. Buried in the National Health Profile, 2019, casualties such as Anju’s are a statistic on 100 per cent fatality rate for rabies in India.

India needs 3.5 crore doses of anti-rabies vaccine annually and is facing an acute shortage forcing the National Pharmaceutical Pricing Authority to instruct all five manufacturers of anti-rabies vaccines — IIL, Zydus, Cadila, Bharat Biotech, SII and Sun Pharmaceuticals — to address the issue by facilitating availability. What the Health Ministry has not done is to address the core issue of over-dependence on private manufacturers for essential vaccines and the absence of a clear-cut national vaccine policy that renders even the Universal Immunisation Programme (UIP) susceptible to the machinations of the market players.

Disastrous decision

The impact of a disastrous decision in 2008 to shut down the three largest public sector units — Central Research Institute (CRI), Kasauli, Pasteur Institute of India (PII) Coonoor, and BCG Vaccine Laboratory (BCGVL) Guindy — dramatically altered the vaccine availability and pricing in India. These facilities were supplying not just the entire Universal Immunisation Programme (UIP) demand for the anti-tuberculosis BCG vaccine, Tetanus Toxoid and DPT vaccines but also producing yellow fever vaccine, anti-snake venom and anti-rabies vaccine. The promised highly-modernised vaccine park in Chennai to replace these units has still not started delivering at the economies of scale that it was supposed to.

While this led to a steady price increase in the cost of basic vaccines and severely limited access over the years, the government slowly resumed production in some units. The resumption of production in PSU units, even though it has been half-heartedly and without adequate financial support and augmentation, still witnessed an increase in supply and by 2013-14, the BCGVL was supplying over a third of the country’s demand for BCG vaccine while also bringing the price down from ₹3 to ₹2.80.

Government needs to step up

This begs the obvious question about why the government has not spent more on augmentation and modernisation as well as expansion of vaccine PSUs whereas countries such as Brazil meet the entire supply of vaccines for its immunisation programme in publicly-funded vaccine manufacturing units. China similarly has several government-run production institutes.

Indeed, inclusion of a vaccine in the UIP in India is equivalent to accessing the market of over 60 rich countries simultaneously which is the reason for hectic lobbying and promotion of irrational vaccination even against diseases against which Indians develop natural immunity.

Against an initiative of the Delhi Government to promote vaccination of hepatitis A virus (HAV), research among school children by Dr SK Acharya, Yogesh Batra et al of the All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) published in the Bulletin of WHO 2002 showed that by the time they are 10-12 years old, children in government schools had roughly 98 per cent anti-HAV antibodies and the incidence of HAV infection had shown no increasing trend to require inclusion of a publicly-funded vaccination programme. Irrational advertising campaigns such as anti-pneumococcal vaccine promotion, etc., need to be perceived in this context.

It is clear that over-dependence on private players is leaving the most vulnerable sections susceptible to easily treatable infections due to scarcity and lack of access on one hand and promotion and introduction of irrational and controversial vaccines on the other.

The government needs to step in and follow the recommendations of different parliamentary panel reports as well as the suggestion made by a committee led by former health secretary Javid Chowdhury, which said: “The committee recommends that the revocation of the suspension of the licence of the units (vaccine units at Kasauli et al ) be made subject to the condition that a new line for production of vaccine/sera will be set up at the three locations within a period of three years…

“The committee recommends that the Ministry considers making them (vaccine units) autonomous by registering them as companies… The committee recommends that the government considers constituting a National Vaccine Security Advisory Board composed of stakeholders such as public health specialists, paediatricians, public health administrators, vaccine techonologists, etc., to advice the government on important issues related to national vaccine security…”

In no civilised society or state would a child be left to die of a totally treatable disease because she did not have an identification card. It is time India addresses real and immediate health concerns of its citizens.

Published on November 15, 2019