Gulf Today

COVID-19 sparking oxygen emergency: UN

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GENEVA: The COVID-19 pandemic has let an already strained medical oxygen supply gasping for breath, with the UN and its partners warning on Thursday that $1.6 billion was needed to address the global emergency.

COVID-19 has put massive pressure on health systems around the world, and in particular in poorer countries, where many hospitals have faced oxygen shortages.

This has resulted in preventabl­e deaths and forced families of hospitalis­ed patients to pay extra to ensure access to oxygen for their loved ones.

The who-led act-accelerato­r, a globally-pooled hunt for COVID-19 vaccines, diagnostic­s and treatments, said Thursday it was launching an Oxygen Emergency Taskforce to address the spiralling crisis.

“This is a global emergency that needs a truly global response,” said Philippe Duneton, head of the internatio­nal health agency Unitaid, which co-leads the therapeuti­cs pillar of ACT.

A wide range of organisati­ons are participat­ing in the taskforce, including WHO, UNICEF, the Global Fund, World Bank and Save the Children.

The global supply of oxygen was already constraine­d prior to the pandemic for treating things like pneumonia — which kills some 2.5 million people annually.

But COVID-19 has significan­tly exacerbate­d the problem.

An estimated half-million COVID patients in low and middle-income countries alone need 1.1 million cylinders of oxygen every day, Thursday’s statement said.

At the same time, 25 countries, mostly in Africa, are reporting surging demand. “The COVID-19 pandemic has taken this acute shortage and made it a full-blown emergency,” Henrieta Fore, who heads the UN’S children’s agency UNICEF, said in the statement.

She stressed that addressing the oxygen gap would go beyond helping with COVID-19 treatment and avoiding preventabl­e deaths.

It would also “help to improve health systems and health outcomes beyond COVID-19 in the long term, including for the many newborns and children who require oxygen to survive.”

The new taskforce has determined that $90 million is needed immediatel­y to address the key challenges in oxygen access and delivery in 20 countries, including in Malawi, Nigeria and Afghanista­n.

But the overall needs are far greater, with an estimated $1.6 billion needed this year alone to stabilise the global oxygen supply and ensure access.

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A police officer receives a COVID-19 vaccine at the Wanda Metropolit­ano stadium in Madrid, Spain, on Thursday.
Associated Press ↑ A police officer receives a COVID-19 vaccine at the Wanda Metropolit­ano stadium in Madrid, Spain, on Thursday.

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