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Youngsters eagerly line up for Covid-19 vaccine jab on first day

With the drive starting mostly from schools, many principals and other officials said they received a positive response from students and their families

A youth receives a dose of the Covaxin Covid-19 vaccine at a vaccination center in New Delhi, India, on Monday, Jan. 3, 2022. Photo: T. Narayan/Bloomberg

A youth receives a dose of the Covaxin Covid-19 vaccine at a vaccination center in New Delhi, India, on Monday, Jan. 3, 2022. Photo: T. Narayan/Bloomberg

Press Trust of India New Delhi/Mumbai/Jammu

As lakhs of teenagers got their first COVID-19 vaccine jabs across the country at the start of the inoculation drive for the 15-18 age group on Monday, many of the beneficiaries and their parents said they were eagerly waiting for it and feel a sense of relief, especially in the backdrop of the fresh rise in cases.

From setting up attractive selfie points to putting up imaginative posters and colourful balloons, the designated vaccination centres, mostly schools and educational institutes, were decked up to welcome the youngsters.

The students, some of whom were dressed in school uniforms and others in casuals, were greeted with flowers and gifted pens at some places after receiving the vaccine.

 

Over 39.88 lakh youngsters had registered on CoWIN portal till Monday afternoon after the process began on Saturday for this category and over 12.3 lakh children had received the jab by 3 PM. An estimated 7.4 crore children are there in this age group.

The vaccination campaign started on January 16 last year in a staggered manner, and many youngsters like Harmanjot Singh said they were keen to get the jab as soon as it was allowed for their age group.

"I was waiting for the day to get my dose of the vaccine as the pandemic forced us to stay back at our homes most of the time. We want to get back to regular school and other activities as soon as possible," said Singh, a student of class 11 at a private school in Jammu.

In the national capital, Union Health Minister Mansukh Mandaviya visited a COVID-19 vaccination site for children at RML hospital and interacted with some of the beneficiaries.

With the drive starting mostly from schools, many principals and other officials said they received a positive response from students and their families.

Whenever schools reopened in the midst of the pandemic, I was hesitant to send my son. It will be a relief now that he has received the vaccine, said Savita Devi, whose son was waiting to get the jab at a Delhi government school.

Some students referred to restrictions on travelling and said they did not want to miss out on activities because they are not vaccinated.

This was long-awaited. The third wave is already here and considering how aggressive the second wave was, we were all afraid, said Ritesh Ghosh, a 17-year-old student.

Echoing similar sentiments, Reema Dutta, 15, said there is a sense of relief among people of her age group and they are looking forward to resuming their normal activities once vaccinated against the coronavirus.

We can go outdoors while following COVID protocols once we have received the vaccination. The omicron is already scaring us, she said.

But there were some like Diksha Patel, 17, from Raipur in Chhattisgarh who required some counselling from her family and friends to overcome hesitancy.

"On Sunday, our class teacher posted a message on our Whatsapp group about coming to school and getting vaccinated. I was worried as many of my family members fell ill after taking the vaccine during the second wave in April and May last year," Patel, a Class XI student of JR Dani Government High School, said.

"However, my mother and other family members spoke to me about the benefits of vaccination, especially in view of rising cases and a possible third wave," she told PTI.

Reflecting the urgency in the country as it stares at a possible third COVID-19 wave, leaders on Monday called for taking up the drive on a war footing, while Maharashtra Health Minister Rajesh Tope suggested that those in the 12-15 age bracket should also be allowed to get inoculated.

On December 25, Prime Minister Narendra Modi announced the inclusion of the 15 to 18 age group in the nationwide COVID immunisation programme from January 3.

The vaccine option for this age group would only be Covaxin, according to guidelines issued by the Union health ministry on December 27.

India's COVID-19 tally rose to 3,49,22,882 with 33,750 fresh cases, while the active cases increased to 1,45,582, according to the data updated at 8 AM on Monday.

"I did not have any fear of vaccination. I will encourage my other friends to come and get themselves vaccinated as soon as possible," said 17-year-old girl Poorvi Nakar in Agra, Uttar Pradesh.

In Mumbai, a girl student was the first to receive the vaccine dose at a jumbo COVID-19 centre in the Bandra-Kurla Complex (BKC), where the drive was virtually launched by Maharashtra Tourism and Environment Minister Aaditya Thackeray.

Mumbai has witnessed a sharp rise in COVID-19 cases since the second half of last month.

The city's civic body said vaccines will be given free of cost to children of all schools.

In neighbouring Pune, the vaccination campaign for children commenced at 40 centres on Monday, the city civic body's chief immunisation officer Dr Suryakant Devkar said.

"The beneficiary children were offered a rose, a pen and a mask after the vaccination," Pune Mayor Murlidhar Mohol said.

Parents accompanied their children to the vaccination centres and the teenagers appeared happy and excited to take to jabs against the viral infection, he said.

Jammu and Kashmir Lt Governor Manoj Sinha launched the drive at a government school in Jammu.

"In the coming week, the targeted population (8.33 lakh) will be vaccinated," he told reporters.

As many as 822 vaccination sites have been set up across 20 districts for the vaccination of the children, officials said, appealing to the youngsters to come forward and get themselves vaccinated.

Tamil Nadu Chief Minister M K Stalin urged people to diligently follow precautions as the country entered the next phase of vaccination.

"I do not wish to cause trepidation. Experts say the Omicron variant, which has emerged as a new threat, is highly transmissible though its impact is less severe compared to previous COVID variants. So, face-mask and vaccine against Coronavirus would serve as a shield to protect us now," the chief minister said starting the drive.

Tamil Nadu hopes to administer the jabs to about 33.46 lakh school children in a month's time

Telangana, Uttar Pradesh, Uttrakhand, Odisha, Karnataka, West Bengal, Puducherry, Madhya Pradesh were among the states and Union territories that began the drive on Monday.

We have to hold the vaccination drive on a war footing. Crisis management committees, MPs, MLAs, social workers, volunteers, religious leaders, all are requested to appeal to the children to get vaccinated, Madhya Pradesh Chief Minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan said.

In Gujarat, Chief Minister Bhupendra Patel launched the drive at a school in Koba area of the state capital Gandhinagar.

The Gujarat health department has prepared around 3,500 centres across the state for the special vaccination campaign, and has said it will extend the daily timings of the drive from the current schedule of 9 AM to 6 PM.

Starting the drive from Dimapur District Hospital, Nagaland Health Minister S Pangyu Phom appealed to the beneficiaries to come forward and get inoculated.

Himachal Pradesh Chief Minister Jai Ram Thakur commenced the campaign from Mandi at the Government Vijay Senior Secondary School (Boys).

About 3.57 lakh youngsters in the age group of 15-18 years are eligible for vaccination in the hill state and 4,259 educational institutions would be covered under this campaign.

(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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First Published: Jan 03 2022 | 7:19 PM IST

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