WORLD / ASIA-PACIFIC
India to give COVID-19 booster shots to healthcare workers from January 10
Published: Dec 26, 2021 06:25 PM
Motorists make their way through a water-logged street amid heavy rains in Hyderabad city, India on Monday, the morning after cyclone Gulab made landfall between the coastal Indian states of Odisha and Andhra Pradesh. Photo: AFP

Motorists make their way through a water-logged street amid heavy rains in Hyderabad city, India on Monday, the morning after cyclone Gulab made landfall between the coastal Indian states of Odisha and Andhra Pradesh. Photo: AFP



 India will start administering COVID-19 booster shots as a precautionary measure to healthcare and frontline workers from January 10, 2022, Prime Minister Narendra Modi said on Saturday, as cases of the Omicron coronavirus variant rose across the country.

In a national address, Modi also said those aged 15-18 would start receiving COVID-19 vaccinations from January 3, and those above 60 with comorbidities would be offered booster shots after recommendation from doctors.

"From the point of view of precaution, the government has decided that healthcare and frontline workers should start getting a precaution dose," Modi said in the speech.

India has reported a swift rise in Omicron cases, with the number reaching 415 overall across 17 Indian states.

Modi's government has been accelerating its vaccination campaign, administering at least one dose to 88 percent of the eligible 944 million population, while 61 percent of the eligible population have taken both doses.

As millions still await second shots, the authorities will now start offering booster shots to healthcare and frontline workers, who suffered from an overwhelming second-wave of the virus in the summer that killed tens of thousands.

Medical experts have said India needs to double down on its vaccination campaign and expand coverage to avert another possible surge in new infections particularly in the vast hinterlands where healthcare facilities are sparse.

Modi urged citizens to continue to wear face masks and follow other COVID-19 protocols.

The federal government has urged states to impose curbs on overcrowding in the festive season until the new year and a few states have partially banned public celebrations.