FILE PHOTO: A medic fills a syringe with COVAXIN, an Indian government-backed experimental COVID-19 vaccine, before administering it to a health worker during its trials, at the Gujarat Medical Education and Research Society in Ahmedabad, India, November 26, 2020. REUTERS/Amit Dave/File Photo

Vaccine 'hesitancy' rises among Indians as virus cases fall 

India has reported 9.96 million Covid-19 cases, the second highest in the world, with more than 144,000 deaths


Reuters December 17, 2020
MUMBAI:

Many Indians appear hesitant to get vaccinated for Covid-19 as infections have fallen sharply since a mid-September peak and some people are worried about possible side-effects here, according to a survey of 18,000 people released on Thursday.

India reported 24,037 new infections on Thursday - fewer than 30,000 for a fourth straight day - taking its total to 9.96 million, the second highest in the world. More than 144,000 people have died.

Until early last month, India had looked set to overtake the infection tally of the United States but the gap between them has since widened significantly. US cases have now risen to more than 16 million.

The government says it could soon approve some of the vaccines that have sought emergency use authorisation, including the Oxford-AstraZeneca one and the Pfizer/BioNTech shot, which is already being used in the United States and Britain.

India wants to roll out vaccines here in a few weeks, initially focusing on people more exposed to the virus and over 50, but a survey by New Delhi's citizen-survey platform LocalCircles found that about 69% of respondents saw no urgent need to get immunised.

“It appears some of the key reasons for the hesitancy are limited information about side-effects, efficacy levels and a growing belief in parts of the population that Covid cannot affect them because of their high immunity levels,” LocalCircles said in a statement.

Many people in the survey, which had responses from nearly a third of India’s districts, said they believed “we are moving towards herd immunity”.

Jiaul Haque, a software engineer from the eastern state of Assam, said he thought he had already developed some kind of immunity to Covid-19 and would like to see how the various vaccines work on other people before he signs up for one.

“The vaccine has not passed the regular duration of testing,” the 36-year-old said.

“All vaccine companies are in a race against each other, so I’m also concerned about that.”

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