Coronavirus | Will adenovirus antibodies reduce vector vaccine efficacy?

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Using the same adenovirus subtypes for repeated vaccination might result in reduced efficacy, but not in the case of inactivated vaccines

Unlike the mRNA vaccine platform used by Pfizer and Moderna, where vaccine efficacy reached 94% and 95%, respectively, the vector-based vaccine platform technology used by AstraZeneca and Johnson & Johnson have shown lower efficacy.

While vaccine efficacy is 66% for Johnson & Johnson vaccine, AstraZeneca vaccine showed 55.1% efficacy when the second dose is administered less than six weeks after the first but 81.3% when the gap between the two doses is over 12 weeks. In contrast, Sputnik V vaccine developed by the Gamaleya Research Institute of Epidemiology and Microbiology, Moscow has reported 91.6% efficacy in phase-3 interim analysis.

Pre-existing antibodies

Is the relatively low efficacy of adenovirus-based vaccine in some people because of pre-existing antibodies towards the vector? “Adenovirus-based vaccine platforms have been in development for decades. All through that time, the issue of whether pre-existing antibodies to the adenovirus vector will affect the development of antibodies against the new target the adenovirus is carrying as antigen has remained unclear. There are studies showing that there is a loss of potency if there are pre-existing antibodies, but there are also some other studies showing that there is no major potency loss,” immunologist Dr. Satyajit Rath, formerly with the National Institute of Immunology, Delhi and now a visiting faculty at IISER Pune says in an email to The Hindu.

Dr. Rath adds: “Pre-existing antibodies against adenoviruses will stop the adenovirus particles from getting into cells and making the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein they carry the code for.” The presence of pre-existing antibodies against adenovirus and those developed after first and second dose of the vaccine becomes particularly important when repeat vaccinations are needed, as in the case of boosters against variants or yearly vaccination.

“There is always a group with fair levels of pre-existing antibodies. Sooner or later, anti-adenoviral antibodies will inevitably form, complicating the situation for subsequent vaccinations. But nobody has planned and tested a continuously variable panel of adenoviruses as vaccine vectors for long-term boosting, I am afraid!” says Dr. Rath. Virologist Dr. V. Ravi, formerly with NIMHANS also says there is no data available on how the antibodies against adenovirus subtypes will affect the efficacy of vaccines, especially with boosters.

While high levels of neutralising antibodies against adenovirus subtype Ad5 have been seen in sub-Saharan Africa and Southeast Asia, neutralising antibodies against adenovirus subtype Ad26 were moderately common in the two regions. The amount of neutralising antibodies against subtype Ad26 was markedly lower than for Ad5, a 2011 study found. “If pre-existing immunity to a vector is high, you will expect low response to the cargo antigen. With a heavy dose of the vector that dampening effect can be overcome,” virologist Dr. Jacob John, formerly with CMC Vellore says in an email.

Dr. Rath agrees with Dr. John and says: “It is plausible that unless the anti-adenovirus antibodies are very efficient and are present at high levels, enough virus particles will get in to make the vaccine work well enough; 10-50 billion virus particles are injected into the muscle.”

Clever design

While Johnson & Johnson uses a single dose of Ad26 subtype, the Sputnik V vaccine uses a combination of Ad26 and Ad5 for the first and second dose, respectively. “That is a clever design,” says Dr. John about the use of two different subtypes for the first and second doses of Sputnik V. “Immunity against the first vector will not interfere with the second dose as it contains a different subtype,” says Dr. John.

The AstraZeneca vaccine uses chimpanzee adenovirus. Antibodies against the chimpanzee adenovirus are not prominent in people anywhere in the world. What then is the reason for the low efficacy of the Oxford vaccine? “My guess is the antigen mass (potency) may be relatively low, perhaps adjusted for relatively low cost of production. That is perhaps the reason for a two-dose regimen,” says Dr. John.

“Many issues are involved in determining how well a vaccine design will work. Exactly how the engineered virus was constructed is one factor, the actual number of virus particles given is another. It is not simply a matter of which adenovirus is used as the vector,” says Dr. Rath about the AstraZeneca vaccine.

Effective combinations

AstraZeneca vaccine is already being tested in combination with Pfizer and Sputnik V vaccines. “Is this to increase vaccine efficacy of the Oxford vaccine? “I think that these combinations are being tried for a variety of short-term goals – one is to try to overcome supply chain problems by mixing-and-matching, another is to keep giving a different adenovirus each time for as long as possible,” Dr. Rath says.

Dr. John too feels that a heterologous vector as second or third dose may improve vaccine efficacy. But one can be sure only when data become available. “Let me venture to say that no matter which vector was used for first immunisation, further boosters can be given using an inactivated virus vaccine (like Covaxin) or an mRNA vaccine(like Pfizer and Moderna.”

Dr. Krishna Ella, CEO of Bharat Biotech said during a press conference that people vaccinated with Covishield cannot be administered the same vaccine next year. Was he referring to antibodies that would have developed against adenovirus vector that would make repeat vaccination ineffective? “Dr. Ella might have been referring to a future third dose – which is unlikely to be useful as a booster dose because of immunity to the vector that will render the vector virus non-infectious, hence unable to deliver the cargo (spike protein) inside human cells. However, third or repeated periodic doses will be very effective using inactivated virus vaccine (Covaxin) or mRNA vaccine, which use non-immunogenic lipid vesicles,” says Dr. John.

While using the same adenovirus subtypes for repeat vaccinations might result in reduced efficacy in the case of vector-based vaccines, the inactivated vaccines do not face this problem, as seen in the case of rabies and inactivated polio vaccine. “Theoretically, repeat doses with inactivated vaccines will raise the height of immune response with no chance of any reduction of efficacy. If three doses are taken, especially with at least four months interval between second and third doses, there may not be any need for annual boosting. We will have to obtain data to confirm if the theoretical conclusion is correct in real life,” says Dr. John.

This story is available exclusively to The Hindu subscribers only.

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Colombia Reports First Death from Brazilian Covid Variant

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Colombia confirmed its first death from the P1, or Brazilian, variant of coronavirus, the government said, adding the victim who died in January was older and had various comorbidities.

The P1 variant, which emerged in the Amazon, has driven a second wave of the virus in Brazil’s two most populous cities, Sao Paulo and Rio de Janeiro, which this week moved to tighten measures as their hospitals struggled with cases.

Brazil has registered more than 275,000 deaths from COVID-19, second only to the United States.

“A new case of the P1 variant was detected in an older adult in Bogota with multiple comorbidities who had not traveled. They were hospitalized and died Jan. 28, 2021,” the National Health Institute said in a statement late on Friday.

The World Health Organization has warned Brazil’s outbreak puts neighboring countries such as Colombia at risk.

Colombia first reported cases of the Brazilian variant in January in the Amazon city of Leticia. It halted flights from the city to stop the spread of the variant, but said this week it would restart humanitarian transport under strict rules.

It has also barred flights to and from Brazil.

The government hopes to have administered 1 million doses of COVID vaccines by March 20, just over a month after its rollout began. It has reported 2.29 million infections and nearly 61,000 deaths.

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A documentary traces the journey of Assembly Rooms, the oldest cinema hall of Udhagamandalam

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A documentary throws light on the continuing legacy of Assembly Rooms, the oldest cinema hall in Udhagamandalam that occupies a pride of place in The Nilgiris

Recently, the Assembly Rooms theatre, the oldest cinema hall in Udhagamandalam, screened the classic Mughal-e-Azam to the Governor of Tamil Nadu, Banwarilal Purohit, and his entourage. “It was an honour to host the screening,” says D Radhakrishnan, the honorary secretary, of hosting the Governor, in a docu-feature chronicling the theatre’s journey. Made by Mayanz Theatre, the 25-minute film highlights Assembly Room’s beginnings as a ballroom built for British soldiers in 1886.

Lady Willingdon

“It used to be called Misquith’s Rooms. In 1922, Lady Willingdon (wife of Lord Willingdon who served as the Viceroy of India from 1931-36) bought it for ₹50,000, and donated it to the people of Ooty for promoting art, entertainment and culture. Not many know that [actor and] theatre artiste Vivien Leigh has performed here. From day one, the ground rules were set that no politics should come in the way of running the institution. That holds good even today,” explains Radhakrishnan, a retired journalist of The Hindu and whose association with the theatre goes a long way.

Also Read | Get ‘First Day First Show’, our weekly newsletter from the world of cinema, in your inbox. You can subscribe for free here

Steeped in history

Interestingly, Assembly Rooms is the only cinema hall in the country to have a State’s Governor as its patron and a District Collector as its president. Radhakrishnan became its honorary secretary in 1984. “It’s a way of life from my childhood days. My family lived near the Ooty Botanical Garden which is a stone’s throw away from the Assembly Hall. Tickets were priced at a meagre 42 paise then. Catching a movie became a routine,” he says and recalls watching movies like Sound of Music, Ben-Hur, 10 Commandments, Battle of the Bulge, Clint Eastwood’s A Fistful of Dollars, Alfred Hitchcock’s Psycho and the hugely popular Cleopatra featuring Elizabeth Taylor at the theatre.

Radhakrishnan at the musuem

The Assembly Rooms became a trust in 1923 and began screening English movies in 1924, a practice that continues to this day. In 1974, the theatre underwent a major structural change. A facade came up and the wooden flooring that served as dance floor was removed, and modern seats were installed.

“Now we show other languages too. I remember once when we screened Kamal Hassan’s movie Salangai Oli, some of the audience members sought permission to whistle during two scenes. Discipline is foremost while watching a movie here. There are people who wouldn’t come for a show if their regular seats were not there.”

In the documentary, Radhakrishnan also talks about the museum within the theatre’s premises and which has an enviable collection, including a vintage 1954 Bauer movie projector that is in working condition, old film rolls, cinemascope lens, and phonograph records. The centenary celebrations was held in 1986, spearheaded by Radhakrishnan, and is another milestone since they tied up with NFDC and held a film festival that screened English films, both classics and contemporary ones. Later, a short film festival brought film makers like Mysskin, Bharathiraaja and Leena Manimekalai.

Assembly Rooms has also hosted Amitabh Bachchan once. In the early ‘90s, Bachchan watched the rushes of his film Hum whilst filming for it in Udhagamandalam, recalls Radhakrishnan. “Bachchan and Kimi Katkar were watching the shot that featured Rajinikanth (who also acted in the movie) running down a slope. They commented on his performance, and how it can be bettered in a healthy way. Film maker LV Prasad and Smita Patil have been here too,” he adds.

The renovated compund wall with LED display boards

The theatre stands on 1.15 acre of prime real estate. It was shut in 2011, and was reopened in November 2015 following its renovation; 340 push back seats, digital and 3D technology were introduced to give the audience a better viewing experience. Recently, the 600-ft dilapidated compound wall up got a makeover with seven LED display boards that feature scenes from timeless classics like Sean Connery’s Goldfinger, Mackenna’s Gold, Bruce Lee’s Enter the Dragon to name a few The tradition of printing a programme list of movies three-months in advance had to be discontinued in 2015. “For people from Coimbatore, a weekend trip to Ooty is incomplete without a visit to a popular Chinese restaurant for lunch, a date with hairstylist Varadhan who ran Nilgiri hair dressing salon, and an 8.30 pm show at Assembly Rooms.”Though the lowest ticket prices remained at ₹4 — and the maximum at ₹30 — for a long time, the prices have now been revised. A second class ticket costs ₹60, first class costs ₹80 while the box seat costs ₹100.“As a public institution, Assembly Rooms is still vulnerable. It is a landmark that is truly owned and safeguarded by the people of Udhagamandalam. It is a part of their life,” Radhakrishnan concludes.

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News18 Evening Digest: India to Review AstraZeneca Covid Vaccine and Other Top Stories

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After Blood Clot Concerns in Europe, India to Review AstraZeneca Covid Vaccine

The Centre will carry out a deeper review of post-vaccination side effects from the AstraZeneca Covid vaccine shot next week. This comes in the wake of Denmark, Norway, Iceland and Thailand temporarily halting vaccination with the drug, after isolated reports of recipients developing blood clots. LIVE UPDATES

Fire Breaks Out in Delhi-Dehradun Shatabdi Express, No Injuries Reported

Afire broke out in one of the bogies of the Delhi-Dehradun Shatabdi Express on Saturday, March 13, due to a short circuit, officials said. The mishap occurred in the C4 compartment of the train. All passengers were evacuated safely and injuries have been reported so far, said Uttarakhand DGP Ashok Kumar. READ MORE

Slumdog Millionaire Actor Madhur Mittal Granted Interim Protection from Arrest in Sexual Assault Case

Slumgdog Millionaire actor Madhur Mittal, who was charged with sexually assaulting and battering his former girlfriend, has been granted interim protection from arrest by the Mumbai court. An FIR was filed against Mittal on February 23 at the Khar Police station, accusing him of sexually assaulting and battering his former girlfriend on February 13 at her Mumbai residence. READ MORE

WATCH: Washington Sundar & Jonny Bairstow Involved in Verbal Spat, Umpire Intervenes

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US Capitol Riot Prosecutors May Charge 400-plus People and Plea Deals May Come ‘Within Few Weeks’

The Justice Department is preparing some of the first guilty plea offers for people charged in the Capitol insurrection, as prosecutors grind through massive amounts of evidence, videos and tips against more than 400 possible defendants in an investigation called one of the “largest in American history.” READ MORE

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Tamil Nadu Agriculture University’s renovated botanical garden opens with new attractions

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Tamil Nadu’s second largest garden has been renovated, at the age of 113. Now, a walk through the refreshed botanical garden of Tamil Nadu Agriculture University is a riot of colours, scents and lessons in flora

A canopy of towering gulmohar trees streak the air with yellow as I begin my walk at the Tamil Nadu Agriculture University’s (TNAU) renovated botanical garden in Coimbatore. Adding pleasure to the view is a cool breeze. A few steps away from the profuse yellow, a riot of orange blooms dot the ground. Next to this bay of flowering shrubs of rose, yellow, and orange tecoma flowers are vast stretches of green lawns.

The renovated front of the 113-year-old garden, second largest in the State after the Government Botanical Garden in Udhagamandalam (Ooty), has re-laid lawn grass on both sides, central fountains, and gazebos. A pond will be added with water lillies and lotuses.

The pavement on the main drive is flanked by rows of false Ashoka trees, foliage trees that branch out in tiers, and cordia trees that bear saffron-coloured flowers all through the year. Flowering climbers and clerodendrom shrubs with white and red blossoms form the hedges around arches at the lawns. A QR code displayed next to the trees and plants displays both scientific and common names.

Spread across 47 acres, the garden has over 800 species of flora, both exotic and native, and serves as an education hub for botanists and the general public. “It brings together education, aesthetics, and recreation,” says N Kumar, Vice-Chancellor of TNAU. “The garden is a zero-plastics zone and we ensure that the public strictly adhere to it,” he adds.

The front entrance leads to a renovated play area for children — a cheerful space with multiple swings and colourful slides. An artificial cascade waterfall is being readied. A garden maze with railings is accompanied by rows of clerodendron plants, with tiny white flowers. “These are evergreen plants and can grow up to two metres and in perfect shape. Children can run and hide themselves among the greenery,” says M Ganga, Associate Professor from the Department of Floriculture.

A scented trail

  • I pluck a few leaves from a stevia plant and chew them. They give me an instant sugar rush. “It’s a bio-sweetener, 100 times sweeter than sugar,” says L Nalina, Associate Professor at Department of Floriculture, who specialises in medicinal plants.
  • She adds, as we walk through the herbal and aroma garden that has a valuable collection of over 100 species, “We educate on identification, conservation, and uses of herbal and aromatic plants to the students. The public can also gain knowledge.”
  • Along with plants like nilavembu, brahmi and different varieties of basil, there are species like Thai long pepper ( yaanai thippili), Coleus, aaatukaal kilangu (a tuber shaped like goat’s legs), Malabar spinach and sweet flag (vasambu).
  • The aroma garden has some of the amazing-smelling plants, from the fragrant chamomile and cape jasmine to lavender, thyme, oregano, peppermint, rosemary and cloves.

A little distance away is a five-tiered sunken garden. It has a central pond laid below the ground level, and terraces around it. It also features steps embellished with flowering shrubs like pink euphorbias, and ruellias with pink, white and purple flowers.

“The Department of Floriculture maintains the garden. It’s a tropical botanical garden and serves as an eduction centre for floriculture students to learn about landscaping and concepts of floriculture as it is a part of the syllabus,” explains Kumar.

Along with the existing plants and trees, a number of new species have been added, like the branched palm sourced from the Royal Botanical Garden of Kolkata. A cluster of male and female branched palm trees stands still and picturesque overlooking the four-lawn green turf, developed with Mexican grass.

Beyond flowers and petals

Other attractions include a bambusetum with 15 species of bamboo, a rock garden with cacti species, and a palmatum with diverse palm species.

We stop by and glance at a beautiful pink flower, ( It’s the desert rose, a hardy plant, says Ganga) before moving on take a look at the trellis decked up with purple wreath, a lovely small climber with drooping violet-purple star-like flowers, yellow tabebuias and wild alamandas. A mound lawn with undulating elevations comes into the view, a place to sit and watch beautiful views of the garden. We walk past sivakundalam (sausage tree) and 100-year-old gulmohar trees with buttressed roots, to reach the plant conservatory, where plants are nurtured and protected in a green house with shade net.

A sprinkler water system creates a misty environment for the plants. There are anthuriums, birds of paradise, heliconias, rose grape cluster plants, peace lily, and more.

“These species require high humidity. Most of these plant species are rare, endangered or threatened. These species cannot withstand direct sunlight, so we nurture them under diffused light,” explains Ganga.

These efforts are taken for a solid reason, explains Kumar, “Our objective is to reach out to the public. A love for flora should eventually lead to conservation.”

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Woman Creates Different Versions of Herself as Birthday Party Guests During Lockdown Solitude

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The COVID-19 pandemic induced isolation and quarantine doesn’t seem to end. Though many people have started going out again, many are still taking all possible precautions by avoiding large gatherings or meeting others.

While it can be difficult to isolate, it’s even more annoying when there is a genuine cause for celebration and one cannot do it properly. But some people are taking the lemons this pandemic has thrown at them to make some fun lemonade — like throwing an isolation birthday party with multiple versions of yourself.

Shared on Reddit by user u/MissJinxed, this birthday party is rather special. Titled “Couldn’t go out to celebrate my birthday during lockdown, so I threw a party for myself” is a photograph featuring a normal party scene in a living room. But you may want to look closely. All the “party” guests are various versions of the same girl, dressed in different attires, indulged in different “party” activities.

One “guest” in red dress is dancing on the windowsill, a couple of “guests” are seated on the floor, taking selfies. Each guest has a different personality, as you may expect to have in a large gathering of people. A girl in white top and maroon skirt is chugging wine straight out of the bottle. Another one, dressed in leopard print clothing and styled like an Instagram influencer, is taking a selfie.

Every party has at least one introvert who is kind of anti-social. That guest is seated with a full mask on, distanced from everyone, eyeing others with judgy looks. A “male guest” sits with a solo cup in his hand while a girl in maroon dress looks like to be hitting on him.

This wholesome party picture has gathered over 129K upvotes!

“That one where you disguise yourself as a guy is next f****** level,” wrote one user. But the OP replied it’s not her but an actual guy.This is not the first time someone has thrown a photoshopped quarantine party.

User radesalvo31 shared his birthday party on Imgur with similar “guests.” His party pictures are a lot more elaborate. There are games, birthday cake, and even a surprise entry of the birthday boy!

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Premier League chief hopes fans can return by end of season | Football News – Times of India

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LONDON: The Premier League plans to welcome up to 10,000 fans in stadiums for the final two rounds of matches this season, chief executive Richard Masters said on Friday.
The British government last month set out a four-stage easing of England’s COVID-19 lockdown restrictions.
Under the third stage of the “roadmap”, very large outdoor stadiums will – if all conditions are met – from May 17 be able to have up to 10,000 people or 25% capacity, whichever is lower.
“Hopefully the final two fixtures of our season will have up to 10,000 supporters in them all,” Masters was quoted as saying by the BBC.
“We’ve got to go past those first initial steps in the government’s roadmap to get there, so hopefully that will be a fantastic finale to end the season.”
The current fixture schedule has May 15 and 23 listed as the final two weekends of the Premier League season.
Masters said the suspension of the 2019-20 season and the absence of fans amid the COVID-19 crisis came at a heavy cost.
Stadiums in some parts of England briefly opened up to a limited number of fans in December but the government imposed another lockdown after a new wave of COVID-19 infections.
“Towards the end of this season we’ll get towards 2 billion pounds ($2.78 billion) lost since the start of the pandemic in matchday and broadcast revenue,” said Masters.
“Clubs have continued to invest in competitive match-day squads and the Premier League has continued to make good all of its contributions throughout the pyramid and wider football.
“But the ramifications are that ultimately if there’s less money coming into football, then there’ll be less money going out in the short term.”
Should the vaccination programme in the UK go according to plan, Masters is optimistic football in Britain could be back to normal next season.
“From the beginning of next season, our goal is to have full stadia and the Government’s roadmap offers us that opportunity,” he explained.
Masters also said players will continue to take a knee until the end of the season as the ‘No Room for Racism’ campaign continues to seek positive changes in football and society.
“You will see for the rest of this season more anti-racism messages on player’s shirts and the continuation of taking the knee until the end of the season,” he told Sky Sports.
“We will discuss with the players in the close season what we are going to do to continue to make our feelings clear about anti-discrimination messaging going forward.”

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Odisha waives hostel fees of students of govt technical institutions

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BHUBANESWAR: The state government on Friday announced waiver of hostel fees of students of government technical universities, engineering colleges and polytechnic institutes from April to December last year. It will waive of around Rs 5.1 crore.

Skill development and technical education department sources said that students did not use hostel facilities between April 2020 and December 2020 because the government technical universities, engineering colleges and polytechnic institutes were closed during Covid time. This waiver will help 17,012 inmates of these institutions.

On February 3, the state government had waived off hostel fees of around 30,000 students studying in government-run industrial training institutes (ITIs) in Odisha from April to December last year.



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PM Modi Asks BJP MPs to Turn ‘Facilitators’ For ‘Seva Hi Sangathan’ Vaccination Campaign

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In the parliamentary party meeting of the BJP on Tuesday, Prime Minister Narendra Modi directed MPs to ensure they work towards increasing the scope of the Covid-19 vaccination drive and act as “facilitators” and “help people”.

The BJP has launched the hashtag “#SevaHiSangathan”, which has also been translated in various languages apart from Hindi and English. Through the campaign, the BJP karyakartas learn about the steps they need to take to aid people in the vaccination process.

Some of the instructions on the campaign is to go to door-to-door and sensitise citizens about the eligibility criteria of vaccination in the ongoing phase. Ministers have also been instructed to help people with registration on Co-Win and Aarogya Setu app and set up help desks at vaccination centres and in public places.

The MPS are needed to ensure clean drinking water at vaccination facilities and run awareness programmes through various social media platforms, share photographs of the vaccination of eminent personalities to encourage the general population.

All public representatives must play an active role in this massive vaccination drive and organise video conferences at various levels to kick start the program within a week’s time.

Senior party leaders, including Rajya Sabha MP Dr Anil Jain, have also taken meetings with various state leaders to tell them how to go about this renewed vaccination drive.

A few MPs like Bangalore South representative Tejasvi Surya and Kutch MP Vinod Chavda have started taking such initiatives and have shared the pictures on Twitter.

On Tuesday Prime Minister Narendra Modi had said that “encouraging people to vaccinate themselves as India fights covid should be considered as one of the greatest services to humanity and not a mere job.”

In the second phase, India is looking to innoculate close to 27 crore people, including senior citizens above 60 of age and people 45 years and above with certain comorbidities.

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US Treasury Department, IRS Say New Round Of Covid-19 Relief Payments on the Way

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Officials at the Treasury Department and Internal Revenue Service said Friday that processing the new round of stimulus payments has already begun, with the aim of having the first payments start showing up in bank accounts this weekend.

President Joe Biden signed the new $1.9 trillion rescue package on Thursday, the day after it won final passage in the House. The measure provides for payments to qualifying individuals of up to $1,400, with payments to a qualifying family of four of $5,600.

The payments will be delivered automatically to taxpayers even as the IRS continues delivering regular tax refunds, IRS Commissioner Chuck Rettig said in a statement.

It is estimated that 85% of Americans will be eligible for the payments and the goal is to have millions of the payments disbursed in the next few weeks.

The relief measure, which passed on party-line votes in both the House and Senate, contains the third round of economic-impact payments. The first round passed last spring provided up to $2,000 per individual, and a second round of payments in December provided up to $600 per individual.

The latest package passed with no votes from Republicans, who objected to the size of the measure and argued it was not necessary given signs that the economy is beginning to recover.

Then-President Donald Trump called the payments in the $900 billion relief bill passed in December too small and Biden agreed, pushing the total for an individual up to $1,400.

Officials said that beginning on Monday, people can check the Get My Payment tool on the IRS.gov website to track their own payments.

Taxpayers who have provided bank information with the IRS will receive the direct-deposit payments, while others will get paper checks or debit cards mailed to them.

Officials said in the interest of speeding up the relief payments, the IRS will use the latest tax return available, either the 2019 return filed last year or the 2020 return that is due by April 15.

If a person’s job situation changed last year because of the pandemic, which led to millions of people losing jobs or being forced to work reduced hours, officials said that the IRS will adjust the size of the new impact payments after the 2020 return has been filed and provide a supplemental payment if that is called for. Officials said those adjustments will be made automatically by the IRS for people who have already filed their 2020 returns.

Officials said they wanted to handle the payments this way rather than waiting for the 2020 tax return to be filed in the interest of speeding payments to taxpayers.

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