India is unleashing the world’s fastest rollout, but it is taking a ‘crazy’ risk of a homegrown vaccine

NEW DELHI – As On January 20, the fifth day of the introduction of the COVID-19 vaccine, at 6 p.m., India had vaccinated a total of 786,842 people. In the coming weeks, it plans to vaccinate 30 million health and other front-line workers, and in mid-August it plans to vaccinate another 300 million people using two vaccines: Covishield from Oxford University / AstraZeneca, made in India by the Pune-based Serum Institute, the world’s largest vaccine manufacturer, and Covaxin, a government-backed homegrown vaccine from Bharat Biotech.

“This magnitude of the vaccination campaign has never been attempted in history and this shows India’s ability,” Prime Minister Narendra Modi had said when he opened the vaccine launch on January 16.

India’s challenges leading up to the rollout were twofold: its population size is second only to China; and the magnitude of the pandemic in the country, which is second to the US with 10.5 million people infected and 151,000 dead.

However, it managed to vaccinate 224,301 people in the first two days compared to China, which vaccinated about 73,000 people in the first two days and aims to vaccinate 50 million people by mid-February. The US had managed to vaccinate one million people in the first 10 days from December 14th.

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