advertisement
Precautionary doses of the COVID-19 vaccine will be available to all aged 18 and above from 10 April, the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare announced on Friday, 8 April.
"The ongoing free vaccination programme through government vaccination centres for first and second dose to the eligible population as well as precaution dose to healthcare workers, frontline workers, and 60+ population would continue and would be accelerated," the Health Ministry added.
Serum Institute of India (SII) on Saturday announced their decision to revise the price of their COVID-19 vaccine Covishield for private hospitals from Rs 600 to Rs 225 per dose.
It had earlier been announced that the Covishield booster dose would cost Rs 600 for end users, while hospitals would acquire it at a discounted price.
Taking to Twitter to announce their decision, Serum Institute CEO Adar Poonawalla said:
Soon after SII's announcement, Bharat Biotech, which manufactures Covaxin, said that they will also slash pricing to Rs 225 from 1,200.
The private vaccination centres can charge up to Rs 150 as an additional service charge per dose.
“Private centres must declare the price per dose chargeable by them on Co-WIN, in accordance with the prices declared by the manufacturers,” Union Health Secretary Rajesh Bhushan said on Saturday.
Reacting to the Health Ministry's announcement, chairman of Medanta Hospital, Dr N Trehan, said,
Adar Poonawalla, the CEO of Serum Institute of India too welcomed the government's decision to allow booster doses for all above 18 years.
Speaking to NDTV, Poonawalla said it is a "crucial and timely decision" as several people were finding it difficult to travel as multiple countries restricted people who had not taken a booster dose.
Meanwhile, India reported 1,109 new cases and 43 deaths in the past 24 hours. The country's total infections now stand at more than 4.3 crore, with 5.21 lakh deaths.
On Monday, 14 March, the Union Ministry of Health and Family Welfare had announced that "everyone aged 60+ will now be able to get the precautionary dose."
The Health Ministry had also announced that children aged 12-14 would begin to receive their vaccine against the novel coronavirus from 16 March.
Meanwhile, the Greater Mumbai Municipal Corporation on Wednesday, 6 April, indicated that the city had detected its first case of Omicron's new sub-variant, XE.
However, the Union Health ministry soon issued a clarification, saying that the "present evidence does not suggest the presence of the new variant."
(With inputs from ANI and NDTV.)
(At The Quint, we question everything. Play an active role in shaping our journalism by becoming a member today.)