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14 of 22 states show imbalance in vaccination of SC majority districts
In case of STs, 17 of 19 states show imbalance. Districts with more than average scheduled tribes in their states have lower proportion of fully vaccinated people
By next week, India would have administered 1 billion Covid-19 vaccine doses to its adult population. The country, till October 8, had administered the first dose to 71 per cent of its adult population, and fully vaccinated 28 per cent.
Even though India is set to administer the first dose to its entire population by this year, a Business Standard analysis shows imbalance in vaccine administration.
Data till October 5 show that in 14 of the 22 states, areas with higher-than-average schedules caste (SC) population have been able to fully vaccinate fewer people than districts where the SC population is lower than the state average.
For instance, in Tamil Nadu, the average second-dose vaccination across the state was 14.6 per cent, but districts with more than the state average for SC population (20.7 per cent) had only 13.8 per cent of the population fully vaccinated. Districts with less than average SC population had secured full vaccination for 15.2 per cent.
In West Bengal, districts with a higher proportion of SC population had vaccinated only 13.3 per cent. In contrast, vaccination in districts with less-than-average SC population was 19.9 per cent. In Haryana, there was an imbalance of six percentage points.
Assam, Odisha, Chhattisgarh, Madhya Pradesh were a few of the seven states where areas with more SC population had administered more second doses than areas with fewer SC population.
The imbalance was even higher in terms of scheduled tribes (STs), with 17 of the 19 states fully vaccinating fewer people when compared with areas with fewer ST people.
Jharkhand and Andhra Pradesh were the only two states where ST-dominated areas administered more second doses.
For the analysis, states closer to 100 per cent vaccination, and Union Territories and states where either the SC or ST population was less than five per cent were not considered.
Although the data do not show any correlation between SC and ST population with full vaccination across most states, three of the five states where the correlation was high showed the trend going against SC majority areas. So, even as the proportion of SCs in districts increased, vaccination reduced in Maharashtra, Haryana and West Bengal. In Kerala, an increase in the SC population led to a rise in the administration of the second dose.
Odisha, Madhya Pradesh and Gujarat showed a negative correlation concerning the ST population; Andhra Pradesh, on the other hand, showed a positive trend indicating a rise in the second-dose administration as the proportion of scheduled caste population increased.
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