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. 2022 May;37(3):1847-1850.
doi: 10.1002/hpm.3321. Epub 2021 Sep 12.

COVID-19 vaccination strategies and policies in India: The need for further re-evaluation is a pressing priority

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COVID-19 vaccination strategies and policies in India: The need for further re-evaluation is a pressing priority

Sudhan Rackimuthu et al. Int J Health Plann Manage. 2022 May.

Abstract

India is one of the worst-hit nations by the COVID-19 pandemic and witnessed a devastating impact across cities in the country. Although behavioral measures like wearing a face mask, maintaining social distance, and hand hygiene helped to control the spread of the disease initially, but a long-term action by vaccinating the population is a promising solution. On 16 January 2021, India undertook the challenge to vaccinate 300 million people by August 2021 against COVID-19, the largest vaccination campaign globally. India has been lauded by several prominent organizations around the world for its efforts. But catering to India's massive population is not without its own set of complex challenges. As of 29 July 2021, a mere 9.82 million (approximately 7.03 percent of the total Indian population) people have been fully vaccinated against COVID-19 with the first and second dose, and only 352.5 million (roughly 25.28 percent of the total Indian population) have been partly vaccinated with the first dose. This shows, India's current COVID-19 vaccination policies and plans are still inadequate and not undisputedly equitable even after several amendments in the guidelines. However, even with the second wave abating slowly and steadily in India, there is a need to further re-strategize the current vaccination policy and plans in India against COVID-19 to help achieve long-term positive outcomes in the shortest feasible time frame hoping to evade a third wave.

Keywords: COVID-19; India; vaccination policy.

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References

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