Health
Booster shots to be provided to frontline workers starting Sunday
The decision comes amid a rising number of coronavirus cases.Arjun Poudel
The Ministry of Health and Population has decided to administer booster shots to all frontline workers starting Sunday.
Frontline workers include doctors, nurses, paramedics, lab technicians, hospital staff and ambulance drivers.
Booster shots, according to the government, will also be given to journalists, bureaucrats, lawmakers, those serving in diplomatic missions, financial institutions, prisoners, elderly people at old age homes and refugees who were vaccinated in the first phase of the immunization campaign starting January 27.
“All those who were inoculated in the first phase of the vaccination drive come under frontline workers,” Dr Samir Kumar Adhkari, joint spokesperson for the Health Ministry, told the Post. “They can receive booster shots from any convenient vaccination center starting tomorrow.”
The ministry has also decided to administer booster doses to all people above 60 years, who were inoculated six months ago and to those having compromised immunity from January 28.
The ministry said that the original vaccine will be provided as booster shots.
Amid the rise in coronavirus cases, calls from several quarters had been growing for launching booster shots. However, the government had said it would start boosters once 40 percent of the total population is jabbed.
Despite having enough vaccines in stock, the vaccination campaign has remained woefully slow.
As of Friday, 11,869,974 people, or 39.1 percent of over 30 million population, were fully vaccinated in Nepal.
Coronavirus cases have been rising lately with Nepal on Friday reporting 5,087 new infections.
Earlier in the last week of December, a meeting of the National Immunisation Advisory Committee had recommended that the government start booster shots to the frontline workers and extend shots to the elderly people above 60,who were administered with Vero Cell vaccine.