<p>Hospitals were decked out with flowers and one politician planted a tree as India began Saturday its colossal coronavirus vaccine drive, desperately hoping to end a pandemic that has killed 150,000 of its people.</p>.<p>India aims to vaccinate around 300 million of its 1.3 billion people by July — a number equal to almost the entire US population — with frontline workers, people over 50 and those deemed high risk first in line.</p>.<p>On day one around 300,000 people were due to be vaccinated with Covishield, developed by AstraZeneca and made by India's Serum Institute, or the homegrown Covaxin.</p>.<p>Covaxin is still in clinical trials and recipients on Saturday had to sign a consent form that stated that the "clinical efficacy... is yet to be established".</p>.<p><strong><a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/national/dont-fall-prey-to-rumours-says-pm-modi-as-india-takes-first-shot-at-covid-19-recovery-939646.html">Read | Don't fall prey to rumours, says PM Modi as India takes first shot at Covid-19 recovery</a></strong></p>.<p>But Prime Minister Narendra Modi as he launched the vaccination programme urged people to reject "propaganda and rumours" about the indigenous vaccine.</p>.<p>"The world has immense faith in India's scientists and capacity of vaccine production," Modi, 70, said in a video message.</p>.<p>Inside a 15,000-bed field hospital in Mumbai, authorities set up 15 vaccination booths and expected to inoculate up to 1,000 people on Saturday.</p>.<p>"Back in May, it felt like a losing battle. We were getting 200 cases a day," said Rajesh C. Dere, 46, the dean. "Today I feel a great sense of satisfaction that we have succeeded."</p>.<p>The facility's first recipient was a young female health worker in lab coat and mask. There was applause as she got the jab in her right arm and gave a thumbs-up with her left.</p>.<p>Mohan Ganpat Nikam, 53, a security guard at another Mumbai hospital, said he was scared last year as the pandemic raged through the country.</p>.<p>"I felt so happy when I heard that my name was on the list for vaccinations," he told AFP.</p>.<p>Physiotherapist Smita Ringanekar, 42, said she spent months living in a hotel so she could help patients and not infect her aged parents at home.</p>.<p><strong><a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/national/covid-19-vaccines-are-sanjivani-in-fight-against-pandemic-health-minister-harsh-vardhan-939664.html">Read | Covid-19 vaccines are 'Sanjivani' in fight against pandemic: Health Minister Harsh Vardhan</a></strong></p>.<p>"I haven't visited any of my friends or relatives for months," she told AFP.</p>.<p>"I have seen people dying," said health worker Santa Roy, 35 in the eastern city of Kolkata, saying he now saw a "ray of hope".</p>.<p>Ram Babu, the first recipient in Patna, said he went to the temple on the way to the hospital and was "so excited that I couldn't sleep."</p>.<p>New infection rates in India have fallen sharply in recent months. On Friday 175 people died compared to almost 4,000 a day earlier in the United States.</p>.<p>But experts are concerned a new wave might hit, fuelled by a string of recent mass religious festivals.</p>.<p>Authorities are drawing on their experience with India's massive elections and child immunisation programmes for polio and tuberculosis.</p>.<p>But in an enormous, impoverished nation with often shoddy transport networks and one of the world's worst-funded healthcare systems, it is still a daunting undertaking.</p>.<p><strong><a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/business/bharat-biotech-to-pay-compensation-if-covaxin-causes-side-effects-939713.html">Also Read | Bharat Biotech to pay compensation if Covaxin causes side effects</a></strong></p>.<p>Child inoculations are a "much smaller game" and vaccinating against Covid-19 is "deeply challenging", said Satyajit Rath from the National Institute of Immunology.</p>.<p>Both approved vaccines need to be kept refrigerated, and others being developed will need to be stored at ultra-low temperatures -- and in a country with scorching summers.</p>.<p>There are also concerns about plans to manage the entire process digitally via India's own app, CoWIN -- of which there are already several fake versions.</p>.<p>And as in other countries, there is scepticism about the vaccine, fuelled by a torrent of hoaxes and baseless rumours online about the virus.</p>.<p>For example, multiple Facebook and Twitter posts shared hundreds of times -- debunked by AFP Fact Check -- claimed no vegetarian had died from Covid.</p>.<p>A recent survey of 18,000 people across India found that 69 percent were in no rush to get a Covid-19 jab.</p>.<p>Anecdotal evidence suggests that the approval of Covaxin without data from phase 3 human trials has further eroded trust among doctors and patients alike.</p>.<p>But with "Thank you Modi" posters on the wall, Chand Wattal, 60, a senior Delhi doctor who was among the first to be vaccinated -- with Covishield -- wasn't worried.</p>.<p>"There is no treatment for coronavirus, it is killing people worldwide," he told AFP.</p>.<p>"The phase 3 data (for Covaxin) is not in public domain, that is a concern. But they will release it in 2-3 months, so why waste time."</p>.<p>"All this hype (about Covishield and Covaxin) has been created by the media," agreed Sheela, 28, a nurse.</p>.<p>"Frankly I would prefer Covaxin to Covishield, it feels safer to me," said Praveen Jaiswal, 55, a Mumbai radiologist.</p>.<p>"People who don't believe in vaccines are misled by WhatsApp and Facebook. They don't read facts and look at social media instead, which creates all kinds of misconceptions."</p>
<p>Hospitals were decked out with flowers and one politician planted a tree as India began Saturday its colossal coronavirus vaccine drive, desperately hoping to end a pandemic that has killed 150,000 of its people.</p>.<p>India aims to vaccinate around 300 million of its 1.3 billion people by July — a number equal to almost the entire US population — with frontline workers, people over 50 and those deemed high risk first in line.</p>.<p>On day one around 300,000 people were due to be vaccinated with Covishield, developed by AstraZeneca and made by India's Serum Institute, or the homegrown Covaxin.</p>.<p>Covaxin is still in clinical trials and recipients on Saturday had to sign a consent form that stated that the "clinical efficacy... is yet to be established".</p>.<p><strong><a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/national/dont-fall-prey-to-rumours-says-pm-modi-as-india-takes-first-shot-at-covid-19-recovery-939646.html">Read | Don't fall prey to rumours, says PM Modi as India takes first shot at Covid-19 recovery</a></strong></p>.<p>But Prime Minister Narendra Modi as he launched the vaccination programme urged people to reject "propaganda and rumours" about the indigenous vaccine.</p>.<p>"The world has immense faith in India's scientists and capacity of vaccine production," Modi, 70, said in a video message.</p>.<p>Inside a 15,000-bed field hospital in Mumbai, authorities set up 15 vaccination booths and expected to inoculate up to 1,000 people on Saturday.</p>.<p>"Back in May, it felt like a losing battle. We were getting 200 cases a day," said Rajesh C. Dere, 46, the dean. "Today I feel a great sense of satisfaction that we have succeeded."</p>.<p>The facility's first recipient was a young female health worker in lab coat and mask. There was applause as she got the jab in her right arm and gave a thumbs-up with her left.</p>.<p>Mohan Ganpat Nikam, 53, a security guard at another Mumbai hospital, said he was scared last year as the pandemic raged through the country.</p>.<p>"I felt so happy when I heard that my name was on the list for vaccinations," he told AFP.</p>.<p>Physiotherapist Smita Ringanekar, 42, said she spent months living in a hotel so she could help patients and not infect her aged parents at home.</p>.<p><strong><a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/national/covid-19-vaccines-are-sanjivani-in-fight-against-pandemic-health-minister-harsh-vardhan-939664.html">Read | Covid-19 vaccines are 'Sanjivani' in fight against pandemic: Health Minister Harsh Vardhan</a></strong></p>.<p>"I haven't visited any of my friends or relatives for months," she told AFP.</p>.<p>"I have seen people dying," said health worker Santa Roy, 35 in the eastern city of Kolkata, saying he now saw a "ray of hope".</p>.<p>Ram Babu, the first recipient in Patna, said he went to the temple on the way to the hospital and was "so excited that I couldn't sleep."</p>.<p>New infection rates in India have fallen sharply in recent months. On Friday 175 people died compared to almost 4,000 a day earlier in the United States.</p>.<p>But experts are concerned a new wave might hit, fuelled by a string of recent mass religious festivals.</p>.<p>Authorities are drawing on their experience with India's massive elections and child immunisation programmes for polio and tuberculosis.</p>.<p>But in an enormous, impoverished nation with often shoddy transport networks and one of the world's worst-funded healthcare systems, it is still a daunting undertaking.</p>.<p><strong><a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/business/bharat-biotech-to-pay-compensation-if-covaxin-causes-side-effects-939713.html">Also Read | Bharat Biotech to pay compensation if Covaxin causes side effects</a></strong></p>.<p>Child inoculations are a "much smaller game" and vaccinating against Covid-19 is "deeply challenging", said Satyajit Rath from the National Institute of Immunology.</p>.<p>Both approved vaccines need to be kept refrigerated, and others being developed will need to be stored at ultra-low temperatures -- and in a country with scorching summers.</p>.<p>There are also concerns about plans to manage the entire process digitally via India's own app, CoWIN -- of which there are already several fake versions.</p>.<p>And as in other countries, there is scepticism about the vaccine, fuelled by a torrent of hoaxes and baseless rumours online about the virus.</p>.<p>For example, multiple Facebook and Twitter posts shared hundreds of times -- debunked by AFP Fact Check -- claimed no vegetarian had died from Covid.</p>.<p>A recent survey of 18,000 people across India found that 69 percent were in no rush to get a Covid-19 jab.</p>.<p>Anecdotal evidence suggests that the approval of Covaxin without data from phase 3 human trials has further eroded trust among doctors and patients alike.</p>.<p>But with "Thank you Modi" posters on the wall, Chand Wattal, 60, a senior Delhi doctor who was among the first to be vaccinated -- with Covishield -- wasn't worried.</p>.<p>"There is no treatment for coronavirus, it is killing people worldwide," he told AFP.</p>.<p>"The phase 3 data (for Covaxin) is not in public domain, that is a concern. But they will release it in 2-3 months, so why waste time."</p>.<p>"All this hype (about Covishield and Covaxin) has been created by the media," agreed Sheela, 28, a nurse.</p>.<p>"Frankly I would prefer Covaxin to Covishield, it feels safer to me," said Praveen Jaiswal, 55, a Mumbai radiologist.</p>.<p>"People who don't believe in vaccines are misled by WhatsApp and Facebook. They don't read facts and look at social media instead, which creates all kinds of misconceptions."</p>