• Tuesday, March 04, 2025

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Gender disparity in vaccination reduced: Modi government

Women stand in a queue as they wait to receive a dose of the Covishield vaccine against the Covid-19 coronavirus at a primary health centre in Siliguri on August 2, 2021. (Photo by DIPTENDU DUTTA/AFP via Getty Images)

By: Pramod Kumar

INDIAN government data on Wednesday (4) showed that the gender disparity in India’s Covid-19 immunisation drive has narrowed.

Now, the country is allowing pregnant women to get their jabs and authorities try to dispel rumours about fertility.

Women have received about 47 per cent of the 481 million vaccine doses administered in India, nearly in line with the gender ratio in the country, the data showed.

Men have now received 13 per cent more doses than women, compared with about 17 per cent in early June.

With 42,625 people testing positive for the coronavirus infection in a day, India’s total tally of Covid-19 cases rose to 31,769,132 and the active caseload increased to 410,353, according to data updated by the health ministry on Wednesday.

India officially started vaccinating pregnant women only in July and has been running ground-level campaigns to encourage them to get their shots, according to the government. It has also sent teams of grassroots health workers to towns and villages to dispel fears that vaccines affect fertility.

A communication strategy is in place which is being implemented across “sustain vaccine confidence”, the health ministry told parliament on Tuesday (2), highlighting the efforts to reach out to more women.

India has administered the most number of coronavirus vaccine doses in the world after China, according to the government’s Co-Win website, but lags many countries in terms of per capita inoculations.

The country wants to immunise all its adult population of 944 million by December and has given at least one dose to nearly 40 per cent of them.

It has reported about 31.8 million coronavirus infections, the most of any country except the US, with more than 425,000 deaths.

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