If Gorakhpur’s 330 encephalitis cases, mostly among children, and 99 deaths have unsettled the authorities, there’s more bad news: the situation can get worse because the peak season for encephalitis stretches from July to October. But what’s baffling health care specialists is the government’s reluctance to go for vaccination though the vaccine for encephalitis, eradicated from developed countries, is produced in Kasauli, Himachal Pradesh. The vaccine, being produced at the Central Research Institute, Kasauli, is a mouse brain killed vaccine. Three doses are required for primary immunisation. Two doses are administered within a gap of 7-14 days followed by a third dose any time after a month and before one year of the second dose. A booster is required after three years. The vaccine is procured directly by state health authorities. Vaccination is not recommended as an outbreak control measure because it takes at least a month after the second dose to develop antibodies and outbreaks are usually short-lived. ‘‘It is not a vaccine that can be given during an epidemic. It can be given to build immunity before the epidemic season starts, much before the rains. But the government is not considering it even in endemic areas like Gorakhpur and Saharanpur,’’ said an official. Sources said vaccine production is way below the requirement. The government, however, has a different take. ‘‘Mouse brain technology has limitations when it comes to huge production. We produced about two lakh vaccines last year and it has been doubled this year. About 70 to 80 per cent of the vaccines go to UP but mass innoculation is not possible,’’ said P.K. Hota, Secretary, Health.