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The government of India on Monday, 19 April, announced the decision to permit everyone above 18 years of age to be vaccinated from 1 May onwards. The decision came after Prime Minister Narendra Modi chaired a meeting with leaders from the pharmaceutical industry.
The decision was announced as part of a “liberalised and accelerated Phase 3 strategy of COVID-19 vaccination that will come in effect from 1 May”.
PM Modi remarked in the meeting that it was because of the efforts made by the pharmaceutical industry that India is now identified as the “Pharmacy of the world”.
He also urged the industry to conduct more and more researches on threats that can occur in future, with regard to COVID-19.
Seeking cooperation from the industry, PM Modi assured that the government is undertaking reforms for new drugs and regulatory processes.
The Finance Minister on Monday, 19 April, agreed to sanction supply credit to COVID-19 vaccine manufactures Bharat Biotech and Serum Institute of India (SII). The credit will be sanctioned to the nodal ministers in charge of COVID-19, who will then pass it on to the two companies to ramp up vaccine production, reports said.
However, it will take a few weeks before manufacturing can be scaled up enough to allow states to benefit from buying directly from the producers.
Earlier, several states had complained of vaccine shortages including Punjab, Maharashtra, Rajasthan, Telangana, Odisha, Andhra Pradesh, Jharkhand, and Delhi.
However, Union Health Minister Dr Harsh Vardhan had dismissed such reports and had tweeted on 8 April, “Hue and cry by certain states about partisanship by the Union government is just a farce, an attempt to hide their own incompetence.”
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