A petition has been filed in the Supreme Court seeking directions to the Central Government to make public the segregated data of clinical trials for the vaccines that are being administered in India under Emergency Use Authorisation granted by the Drugs Controller General of India (DCGI).
The plea has also urged the court to stop coercing citizens directly or indirectly to get vaccinated as it is unconstitutional, arguing that while the government had clearly stated in numerous RTIs that getting vaccinated was voluntary, there were many instances from across the country where various authorities were mandating the vaccines.
The petition, filed by Dr Jacob Puliyel, a former member of the National Technical Advisory Group on Immunisation, through advocate Prashant Bhushan has, however, clarified this was not to be understood as a challenge to the vaccination programme.
"The petitioner recognises that Covid is a public health emergency and that such an emergency may require emergency use authorisations of vaccines which may not yet have been adequately tested. However, that should not mean that all information and data of relevance as to the efficacy or side effects of the vaccines which have been given such approval, should not be collected systematically and made publicly available, especially when the vaccines are being used in a universal immunisation programme", the plea states.
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It adds though emergency authorisation of the vaccines may be advisable in the present situation; it does not, however, mean that these vaccines can be forced upon people, especially without all relevant data being made available for independent public and scientific scrutiny.
The plea contends that the vaccines that have not been adequately tested for safety or efficacy are now licensed under Emergency Use Authorisation without the data being disclosed to the public. "This is a clear violation of the basic norms of scientific disclosure and the guidelines with respect to the disclosure of clinical trial data, as laid down by the World Health Organisation (WHO) and followed by the Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR)", the plea asserts.
"In India, the manner in which the vaccines have been licensed vitiates and even precludes the possibility that the vaccines can be evaluated objectively in the future. Under these circumstances, the petitioner is forced to appeal to this court for public disclosure of trial data and post-vaccination data, as required by international medical norms", the petition states.
The plea has urged the court to direct:
Union of India, Drugs Controller General of India, Indian Council of Medical Research, Bharat Biotech and Serum Instututite have been made respondents to the petition.