As I
was thus lost in the labyrinth of these thoughts, the ring tone of my phone
alerted me to a new message: “Dear …Murty you are eligible and
may avail precaution dose on 19-01-2022 after medical advice. Please visit
cowin.gov.in-CoWIN.”
Wow, what a surprise! A
functional message from a functional government, “Isn’t it?”
This instantaneously reminded
me of one of my childhood experiences. It was 1956. I was studying third form
in Taluk High School. One winter evening, I was lazily walking back home from
school. As I reached the stone house of the lawyer, suddenly somebody in a khaki
short and white shirt stopped me in the middle of the road by holding my upper
arm. I stared at him in bewilderment. “Bhayapadaku, ilaa raa! Don’t
fear, come to this side” saying, he pulled me into the open yard of a house
left to the road.
There were two tables placed side
by side and a bench behind each table. A man sitting behind the first table
enquiring me noted down my name, age, the class that I am studying, father’s
name, and location of our house in a big register spread open on the table. He
then explained the purpose of retaining me there thus: “You will be given BCG
vaccine. It protects you from TB. No pain. Good for you. So, coolly take it.”
The khaki short fellow then
took me to the other table. There on that table was placed a white box and a
kerosene stove warming water in a vessel that was loaded with needles and
syringes. Behind it stood a nurse in a white frock and cap with a syringe in
her hand. There was a boy by her side with one of his arms held by an
attendant. Making me stand behind that boy, the khaki short fellow took books
from my other hand and placed them on the bench.
After a while, looking at me
with a smile, the nurse enquiring my name, etc., and rubbing wet wool on my
deltoid muscle gently, suddenly inserted the needle into the muscle and injected
the vaccine by pressing the plunger… Then pulling it out, she applied slight
pressure on the injection site with a wet ball of wool and then directed me to
sit on the bench for 10 minutes holding the cotton at the site, and then to go
home. Also told, “You may get slight pain tomorrow. Don’t fear. That’s OK! If
you feel hardness at the site, ask your amma
to massage there with warm water—not today, only tomorrow, (sareena?) OK?”
So, that was how I got
vaccinated in 1956. For that day, that was a great feat! Indeed, the Government,
laying down the organizational set-up required in each state to cover the total
young population during a five to seven years period, started the BCG
Vaccination mass campaign in 1951 and covered all the states by 1955-56. Perhaps,
that laid the foundation for subsequent mass campaigns for vaccination in the
country!
Of course, today IT has
revolutionized the whole scene. It simply transformed governance even in
countries of the Global South by enabling them to offer better public service.
So, today, if I get a text message from government reminding me about my due
date for a booster dose, there is absolutely no wonder. For, the radical
changes in our daily lives that were ushered in by IT have by now become a
taken for a granted lot!
Nevertheless, Covid-19 pandemic
has further highlighted the importance of AI, machine learning, IoT, and
digital technologies to public health security and pandemic preparedness by
answering the call for enhanced agility, scale, and responsiveness more
effectively. AI and high-performance computing have also come in handy in
accelerating research into understanding the virus and developing vaccines,
therapeutics to arrest and treat infections.
Even we in India experienced
the benefits of our government leveraging IT to manage the pandemic. It is the
government’s Cloud-based digital platform CoWIN, which, by facilitating easy
and accurate registration for appointments, and recording the immunizations,
helped the nation to cover around 87 crore people with two doses of the vaccine
and over 100 crores of people with at least a single dose. Imagine how much
time it would have taken if everyone were to be caught hold of by hand as I was
then and inject vaccine and take a note of it in a register with a pen!
You know as a student I was to
run around Municipal offices for quite a number of times to get a vaccination
certificate that was needed for attaching to the application form seeking
admission to professional colleges such as medical college, agricultural
college, etc. But today, sitting at the home I just downloaded my Covid-19
vaccination certificate straight from CoWIN platform—not once, but at the
completion of first, second, and the booster dose. That’s the luxury IT is affording
today!
Storing of such voluminous data
pertaining to more than 100 crore of people and making it available for
individuals to download as they desire with a click of mouse that too, quite
accurately, has now become a child’s play with the availability of Cloud
Computing. What a technological progress! And, another important gain to the
ordinary citizen is the elimination of the erstwhile rent-seeking agents in the
system. That’s a real comfort.
Thanks to IT, today, the government
has even digitalized the vaccine supply chain network—Electronic Vaccine
Intelligence Network (eVIN) developed with the support of Gavi, The Vaccine
Alliance, and implemented under the UN Development Program through a smart-phone
based app— through the use of cloud technology that keeps it posted with the
latest information on vaccine stocks and temperatures across the network in the
country. This ensures the maintenance of the efficiency of the national cold
chain network.
Having said that, we cannot
ignore the fact of weak links that the pandemic had exposed in an otherwise strong
vaccine service delivery network that we have built over the years. For, the
success of a sustainable vaccination program heavily relies on supportive infrastructure
such as the uninterrupted supply of electricity that maintains the functionality
of the cold chain network. But reports indicate wastage of vaccines due to
failure to properly control storage temperatures. And such wastage has two
implications: one, cost implication, and two, importantly delays the
achievement of immunization targets.
Aside from the laurels for the good
work so far done, we, taking a cue from these experiences, must pivot to newer
mechanisms such as solar energy, etc., to build resilient cold chain systems across
the country to be future-ready to handle newer pandemics, if any, more
effectively.
**
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