India orders 300 million doses of an unapproved coronavirus vaccine

India has ordered 300 million doses of an unnamed amd unapproved vaccine from Indian firm Biological E. The coronavirus vaccine is is in Phase 3 trials, and had showed “promising results” in the first two phases, the federal government said in a statement. However, the $206m order has not received emergency approval.

India has administered just over 220 million jabs so far, although much of its 1.4 billion population is now eligible for the vaccine. Less than 15% of the country has received at least one dose of the vaccination, largely because of a severe shortage of doses.

India is still adding more than 100,000 news cases a day, recording more than 340,000 deaths from the virus so far. Experts however say the number is vastly underestimated

Daily wagers wait in a queue for vaccination at the 'Vaccination on wheels' in Kolkata. A bus was turned into a COVID vaccination centre to curb the surge in COVID-19 cases in India.
India has fully vaccinated fewer than 10% of its 1.4 billion people

India is currently giving three vaccines – Covishield, manufactured by the Serum Institute of India (SII), and Covaxin, developed by Indian firm Bharat Biotech and the government’s Indian Council of Medical Research, and Sputnik V, which is developed by Moscow’s Gamaleya Institute.

Compared to the single order from Biological E for 300 million doses, India brought about 350 million doses from both Covishield and Covaxin between January and May.

India’s drug regulator gave Covaxin emergency approval in January before trials were completed – data on its efficacy is yet to be released.

The new vaccine from Biological E is “likely to be available in the next few months,” according to the government.

Mr Modi’s government is racing to shore up its vaccine stocks as Covid numbers dip, hoping to be well-prepared for what experts say is an inevitable third wave.

India’s vaccine drive, which had a promising start in January, began to slow down because vaccine hesitancy crept in as cases dropped. But numbers soon rose again in a deadly second wave that saw hospitals falling short of beds and crematoriums running short of space.

Hoping to stem the tide, the government threw open the drive in May to everyone above the age of 18 but India’s two vaccine makers – Serum Institute and Bharat Biotech – could not guarantee supply at that scale.

But shortages persist and have also led to vast inequalities in access with rural areas, the poor and women falling behind in the line for jabs.

Source: bbc.com

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