Doctors
scale rockslides, invoke gods to vaccinate Himalayan villages
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[September 24, 2021]
By Adnan Abidi
MALANA, India (Reuters) - To visit the
Indian village of Malana deep in the Himalayas, a COVID-19 vaccination
team scrambled over a landslide that blocked the road the day before,
scaled a retaining wall and then began a three-hour trek down and up a
river valley.
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Despite the hostile terrain, the northern state of Himachal Pradesh,
where Malana is located, earlier this month became the first in
India to administer at least one COVID-19 vaccine dose in all its
adults.
The steep topography was one challenge overcome by health workers
walking for hours or days to reach remote villages and another was
religious beliefs, as the tourism-dependent state immunised its
roughly 5 million adults.
On Sept. 14, a team of five led by district health officer Dr Atul
Gupta set out to Malana to administer second vaccine doses.
Blocked by the landslide, they left their vehicle with two blue
vaccine boxes slung over their shoulders to manoeuvre over the
rubble, climb the wall and then walk to the trailhead leading to the
village, accompanied by a Reuters photographer.
Before beginning the trek to the village, Gupta and his team placed
the boxes onto a gondola connected to pulleys to carry the medicine
across the river gorge that separates Malana from the road. That
lightened their walk considerably as they set off to cross the gorge
which drops down about 100 metres (330 feet).
During a rest break on the trek, Gupta said that to convince
Malana's 1,100 adults to take their first shots in August, its
district chief had priests invoke a local Hindu deity. This helped
health workers cover up to 700 people in three days, he said.
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When Gupta's team reached the
village on Sept. 14, nearly three dozen people,
who took their first shots before the
invocation, lined up to get their second shots
just opposite an ancient temple to the deity.
"People were initially scared to take the vaccine, worried they
would fall sick or die," said village head Rajuram, who gave just
one name, sitting by the carved wood and concrete walls of the
temple. "Then I took it and others also mustered the courage."
Himachal Pradesh's Chief Minister Jai Ram Thakur pins the state's
vaccination success to its village-to-village drive, its decision to
involve local-level politicians, and the federal government's push
to prioritise immunisations in tourist hotspots.
India wants to vaccinate nearly all of its adults by December,
having administered at least one dose to two-thirds of people and
two doses in less than a quarter. Thakur wants Himachal Pradesh to
be the fastest state to reach the two-dose milestone, hopefully by
November.
(Additional reporting and writing by Krishna N. Das; Editing by
Christian Schmollinger)
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