‘Frame no-fault compensation policy for adverse events post COVID vaccination’
No-Fault Compensation Policy for Adverse Events Post COVID-19 Vaccination
UPSC Prelims + Mains Study Note
1. At a Glance
- The Supreme Court of India (March 2026) directed the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare (MoHFW) to frame a structured no-fault compensation policy for serious Adverse Events Following Immunisation (AEFI) arising from COVID-19 vaccination — a landmark public-health jurisprudence ruling. [S1]
- India currently has no uniform or structured policy mechanism to redress individuals who suffer serious adverse effects post-vaccination, despite running one of the world's largest immunisation drives. [S1]
- The concept is rooted in welfare-state liability: the State's duty of care to citizens who bear collective risk for public health — distinct from fault-based tort liability. [S1][S2]
- Directly relevant to GS-II (health governance, judiciary) and GS-IV (ethics of public health policy); high probability of Mains essay or application-based question in 2026–27 cycle.
2. Why in the News
- March 10–11, 2026: Supreme Court delivered judgment in Rachna Gangu v. Union of India (2026 INSC 218), directing the Centre to formulate a no-fault compensation framework for COVID-19 vaccine AEFIs. [S1][S2]
- The case arose from petitions seeking compensation for deaths and serious injuries allegedly caused by COVID-19 vaccines administered during India's national immunisation programme. [S1]
- The Bench of Justices Vikram Nath and Sandeep Mehta authored the judgment (Justice Nath writing). [S1][S4]
- The court also directed that AEFI-related data be placed in the public domain periodically — a transparency directive alongside the compensation mandate. [S1]
3. Background & Evolution
| Year | Milestone |
|---|---|
| 1986 | USA enacts National Childhood Vaccine Injury Act — world's first large-scale no-fault vaccine compensation scheme |
| 1992 | Universal Immunisation Programme (UIP) formalized in India under MoHFW; covers 12 vaccine-preventable diseases |
| 2010 | Only 19 WHO Member States had vaccine injury compensation schemes; all were high-income countries [S3] |
| 2013–14 | India strengthens AEFI surveillance post GAVI guidelines; National AEFI Committee constituted under MoHFW |
| 2021 | India launches COVID-19 vaccination drive (world's largest: Covishield, Covaxin, Sputnik V); no formal compensation framework established |
| 2021–22 | COVAX Facility allocates $150 million for no-fault compensation in 92 lower-income countries — India not a COVAX recipient country for doses at scale [S3] |
| 2026 (Mar) | Supreme Court in Rachna Gangu directs MoHFW to frame structured no-fault compensation policy [S1][S2] |
- Predecessors: India had causality-assessment committees (National and State AEFI Committees) but no accompanying statutory compensation mechanism. Assessment ≠ compensation.
4. Core Static Facts
Definitions - AEFI (WHO definition): Any untoward medical occurrence after vaccination that does not necessarily have a proven causal relationship with the vaccine. [S3] - No-Fault Compensation: Financial relief provided to a vaccine-injury victim without requiring proof of negligence by the manufacturer, administrator, or State. [S2][S3] - Serious AEFI: Events resulting in hospitalisation, permanent disability, or death.
Institutional Framework (existing) - National AEFI Committee: Constituted under MoHFW; conducts causality assessment of serious/severe AEFIs from the national immunisation programme. [S1] - State AEFI Committees: Conduct preliminary assessments before referral to national level. [S1] - Implementing Ministry: Ministry of Health and Family Welfare (MoHFW). [S1] - Nodal programme: Universal Immunisation Programme (UIP) under National Health Mission (NHM).
Case Citation - Rachna Gangu v. Union of India, 2026 INSC 218. [S2] - Bench: Justices Vikram Nath and Sandeep Mehta. [S1]
Global Benchmarks - As of 2010: Only 19 WHO Member States had vaccine injury compensation programmes; all were high-income nations. [S3] - COVAX No-Fault Compensation Programme: USD 150 million fund for 92 lower-middle-income countries for COVID-19 vaccine-related serious AEFIs. [S3]
COVID-19 Vaccines Used in India - Covishield (AstraZeneca/SII), Covaxin (Bharat Biotech), Sputnik V (Gamaleya/Dr. Reddy's).
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Legal / Constitutional
- The SC held that the State–citizen relationship in a public vaccination programme cannot be viewed "through the prism of fault-based liability." [S1]
- The judgment does not constitute an admission of liability by the Union of India — a careful legal qualifier preventing retrospective flood of claims. [S1]
- Individuals retain the right to pursue other legal remedies (tort suits, consumer courts) alongside the no-fault framework. [S1]
- Gap in Article 21 (Right to Life) jurisprudence: mandatory/strongly nudged vaccination without a compensation safety net raises proportionality concerns.
Ethical / Governance
- Collective risk principle: Individuals vaccinated under State-driven programmes bear risks for societal benefit; ethical obligation of the State to share the burden of rare but severe adverse outcomes. [S2]
- No-fault schemes prevent chilling effects on vaccine uptake — fear of un-compensable harm drives hesitancy.
- Transparency gap: Absence of publicly accessible AEFI data undermines trust; SC directed periodic public disclosure. [S1]
- Risk of moral hazard: Over-broad no-fault schemes may disincentivise manufacturers from improving vaccine safety.
Social
- COVID-19 vaccination was described as an "unprecedented scale… collective societal necessity" — disproportionate burden fell on the poor and unaware. [S1]
- Families of AEFI victims (predominantly from lower-income strata without litigation capacity) benefit most from a no-fault, administrative (not court-based) redress mechanism.
- Gender dimension: Female caregivers and frontline health workers were early priority groups; their AEFI grievances need structured acknowledgement.
Administrative
- India's current structure performs causality assessment but stops short of compensation disbursement — an institutional design gap. [S1]
- A no-fault scheme requires defining: eligibility threshold (severity), quantum formula, time limit for filing, and adjudicating authority.
- Federal challenge: States run vaccination drives operationally under NHM; liability and fund-sharing between Centre and States must be structured.
Scientific / Technological
- Causality ≠ Compensation trigger: Under no-fault, a proven causal link is not required — claimant need only show temporal association + plausibility. [S3]
- The SC explicitly stated it had no intention to embark on a scientific inquiry into AEFI deaths — separating legal redress from epidemiological determination. [S1]
- AEFI data transparency (directed by court) supports post-market vaccine pharmacovigilance — feeds back into vaccine safety science.
Economic
- No-fault schemes reduce litigation costs for both claimants and the State compared to tort-based compensation.
- Risk of under-compensation if administrative awards are fixed at low levels vs. actual loss of earning/medical costs.
- Precedent for future epidemic/pandemic preparedness financing — could be linked to a dedicated Health Emergency Fund.
6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)
- March 10–11, 2026: Supreme Court judgment in Rachna Gangu v. Union of India (2026 INSC 218) — directed MoHFW to expeditiously frame no-fault compensation framework for COVID-19 vaccine AEFIs. [S1][S2]
- March 2026: SC directed AEFI-related data be placed in the public domain on a periodic basis — a transparency order. [S1]
- Government affidavit (filed before SC): Union of India provided data on total AEFI reported during the COVID-19 vaccination programme (exact figures not publicly disclosed in the article excerpt). [S4]
- SC clarified: formulation of the framework shall not be construed as admission of liability or fault by Union of India or any authority. [S1]
7. Prelims Hooks (High-Density Factual Bullets)
- AEFI = "Adverse Event Following Immunisation" — defined by WHO as any untoward medical occurrence after vaccination that does not necessarily imply causal relationship with the vaccine. [S3]
- The Supreme Court judgment in Rachna Gangu v. Union of India is cited as 2026 INSC 218. [S2]
- The judgment was authored by Justice Vikram Nath (Bench: Justices Vikram Nath and Sandeep Mehta). [S1]
- The Court directed the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare (not Ministry of Pharmaceuticals or NITI Aayog) to frame the policy. [S1]
- As of 2010, only 19 WHO Member States had vaccine injury compensation programmes; all were high-income countries. [S3]
- COVAX allocated USD 150 million for no-fault compensation in 92 lower-income countries for COVID-19 vaccine AEFIs. [S3]
- Under a no-fault scheme, the claimant need not prove negligence — only that the adverse event followed immunisation and meets eligibility criteria. [S2][S3]
- India's National AEFI Committee is constituted under MoHFW and does causality assessment — but currently has no compensation-disbursement mandate. [S1]
- State AEFI Committees conduct preliminary assessments before referring cases to the National AEFI Committee. [S1]
- SC ruled that the State-citizen relationship in public vaccination cannot be viewed through the prism of fault-based liability. [S1]
- The SC's judgment does not preclude individuals from pursuing other available legal remedies (tort suits, consumer forums). [S1]
- The three COVID-19 vaccines used in India's national drive: Covishield (SII/AstraZeneca), Covaxin (Bharat Biotech), Sputnik V (Gamaleya/Dr. Reddy's). [Knowledge]
- The SC explicitly stated it had no intention to embark on a scientific inquiry into AEFI deaths — separating legal and epidemiological determinations. [S1]
- Framing the no-fault policy shall not constitute an admission of liability by the Union of India. [S1]
8. Mains Relevance
GS Papers & Syllabus Headings
| Paper | Heading |
|---|---|
| GS-II | Government policies and interventions for development; Health; Judiciary; Welfare schemes |
| GS-II | Separation of powers; SC judgments affecting governance |
| GS-IV | Ethics in governance; Public trust; Rights of vulnerable sections |
Plausible Mains Questions
-
"The Supreme Court's direction to frame a no-fault compensation policy for COVID-19 vaccine adverse events marks a shift from tort liability to welfare-state liability. Analyse the significance and challenges of such a framework for India." (GS-II, 15 marks)
-
"Discuss the ethical dimensions of a no-fault compensation scheme for vaccine injuries in the context of State-mandated immunisation programmes. How does it balance individual rights against collective public health imperatives?" (GS-IV, 10 marks)
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"India's AEFI surveillance architecture identifies harm but provides no redress. Critically examine the institutional gaps and suggest a compensation framework design drawing on global models." (GS-II, 15 marks)
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Connection |
|---|---|
| Universal Immunisation Programme (UIP) | Parent programme under which COVID vaccination was conducted; any no-fault scheme will operate within this framework |
| National Health Mission (NHM) | Administrative vehicle for vaccine delivery; Centre-State funding and liability issues arise under NHM architecture |
| COVAX Facility & Global Vaccine Equity | International precedent for no-fault COVID vaccine compensation; $150M fund model relevant for India's design |
| Drugs and Cosmetics Act, 1940 & New Drugs and Clinical Trials Rules, 2019 | Statutory framework for vaccine regulation; gaps in post-market compensation obligations |
| Consumer Protection Act, 2019 — deficiency of service | Current available (but inadequate) recourse for vaccine injury victims in the absence of a no-fault scheme |
| Article 21 and Right to Health jurisprudence | Constitutional underpinning for State's duty to protect citizens from harm caused by State-directed public health measures |
| Epidemic Diseases Act, 1897 & NDMA Act, 2005 | Emergency powers exercised to mandate vaccination; accountability provisions under these Acts |
| Pharmacovigilance Programme of India (PvPI) | Post-market drug/vaccine safety surveillance infrastructure managed by IPC (Indian Pharmacopoeia Commission) under CDSCO |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
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Wrong Ministry: Aspirants may confuse the implementing body. The directive is to Ministry of Health and Family Welfare — NOT Ministry of Pharmaceuticals, DBT, or NITI Aayog. [S1]
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AEFI ≠ Vaccine Side Effect: AEFI is a WHO technical term denoting any adverse event temporally associated with vaccination — it does not imply proven causation. Conflating AEFI with confirmed vaccine harm is a factual error.
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No-Fault ≠ Absolute Liability: No-fault removes the burden of proving negligence, but does not mean automatic compensation for every AEFI — eligibility criteria (severity thresholds, temporal windows) still apply. Do not confuse with "strict liability" under tort law.
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Judgment ≠ Admission of Liability: The SC explicitly clarified the no-fault framework is not an admission of fault by the Government — aspirants who state "SC held vaccines caused deaths" misread the judgment. [S1]
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National AEFI Committee ≠ Compensation Body: The National AEFI Committee performs causality assessment — it is a scientific/technical body, not a compensation authority. A separate adjudicating structure must be created by MoHFW as per the SC directive.
11. Sources
- [S1] SC asks Centre to frame 'no-fault compensation policy' for COVID-19 vaccine adverse effects — Onmanorama / The Hindu Bureau report, March 2026 — (Tier 4 / Article Excerpt)
- [S2] Explore No-Fault Compensation for COVID-19 vaccine effects, orders SC — SCC Times / SCC Online, March 11, 2026 — (Legal reporting; case citation confirmed)
- [S3] WHO — Injury Compensation (Vaccine Safety — GACVS) — who.int — (Tier 2)
- [S4] Rachna Gangu v. Union of India (2026 INSC 218) — case details — Verdictum / Supreme Court Observer — (Legal case repository)
Note: All facts traced to [S1]–[S4] above. Aspirants should track MoHFW's policy notification pursuant to the SC directive — that gazette/policy document will become the primary Tier 1 source once published.