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The cost of a booster dose at a private vaccination clinic is capped at ₹150

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The cost of a booster dose at a private vaccination clinic is capped at  ₹150

The government announced on Saturday that private vaccination centres can charge a service fee of up to  150 in addition to the cost of the third Covid-19 vaccine shot. The third dose of the vaccine, dubbed as a precaution dose by the government, will be the same as the first and second doses, according to the Union health secretary, who spoke after a meeting with all state and union territory health secretaries.

Because all due beneficiaries are already registered on CoWIN, no new registrations are required for the precaution dose.

The central government announced on Friday that beginning April 10, all adult citizens will be able to receive their precaution shot if their second shot was given at least nine months prior. Frontline workers and people aged 60 and up have already received the booster dose at no cost. Others, on the other hand, will have to pay for the precaution doses, which will only be available at private vaccination clinics.

Covid -19

Covid infection linked to more type 1 diabetes in kids and teens: Study

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Covid infection linked to more type 1 diabetes in kids and teens: Study

Two studies that did not definitively resolve the question of whether the coronavirus can cause the chronic disease of diabetes found that Covid-19 in children and adolescents appeared to increase the chance of acquiring diabetes. Over two years after the pandemic’s commencement, researchers from the Norwegian Institute of Public Health looked at new type 1 diabetes diagnoses using national health registries. They discovered that type 1 diabetes was roughly 60% more likely to develop in children who had tested positive for the coronavirus.

The risk within 30 days of a Covid infection confirmed by a PCR test was examined by the researchers. Young adults were also included in a Scottish study that was presented at the European Link for the Study of Diabetes meeting. This study indicated an increased risk one month following the viral sickness, but the researchers said they discovered no association after that point.

The authors of both studies emphasised that their findings do not necessarily imply a causal link between diabetes and the coronavirus. Other potential causes were emphasised, such as delays in seeking medical attention during the epidemic, the introduction of other diseases, and alterations in way of life brought on by lockdowns.

Jamie Hartmann-Boyce, an associate professor at the Nuffield department of primary care health sciences at the University of Oxford, stated: “There are a lot of plausible reasons that Covid-19 might lead to development of type 1 diabetes, but this remains in no way proved.”
According to a paper earlier this week in the medical journal The Lancet, the number of people with type 1 diabetes, in which the pancreas fails to generate the hormone insulin, may increase from 8.4 million to 17.4 million by the year 2040.

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The illness, which has no known treatment and is most frequently diagnosed in children, is thought to be caused by a combination of genetics and exposure to particular pathogens, including SARS-Cov-2 as well as a larger family of viruses known as enteroviruses. Type 2 diabetes, which is more prevalent, typically appears later in life as sedentary habits and weight increase mess with the body’s ability to manage sugar.

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