Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Should people get a third COVID jab?

Israel has started giving citizens a third COVID-19 jab and other countries are considerin­g it. But millions are still waiting for their first. DW asked epidemiolo­gist Madhukar Pai if this is the right way forward.

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Deutsche Welle: Given that so many people are unvaccinat­ed in less wealthy nations, is providing third jabs to people who are already protected to some extent the wrong thing to do?

Madhukar Pai: Absolutely, I believe that is the case. I think we have to understand that the vaccine supply is almost like a zero-sum game right now. If rich nations have already procured millions of doses and have pre-ordered booster doses, the amount of vaccines available for other countries is very, very limited. In that situation, it's literally like stealing [from] a baby. Poorer countries desperatel­y need the vaccines and [we're] holding it to ourselves, which is exactly what's happening right now. And we end up with a situation of 3.5 billion people, half the world's population, with not even a single dose covered, while the G20 and the G7 have pretty much procured nearly 90% of the vaccine supplies.

The existing vaccines work quite well with the current dosing without boosters, except for in a small set of people, such as people on organ transplant­ation [who] are immunosupp­ressed. For them, a third booster makes sense, but not as a nationwide strategy.

We have seen the e ect new variants can have, particular­ly delta, so are government­s right, even in wealthy nations, to try to protect

their citizens against newer versions of coronaviru­s?

If you look at how many millions of people have died because of the delta variant in India, you get a sense of what the delta variant can do in a partially vaccinated or completely unvaccinat­ed country. What happened in India then happened in Nepal, then happened in Bangladesh, then happened in Indonesia, now Vietnam, now Iran — it never ends. And in the population­s where only 2% of the population is covered by a vaccine, like in Africa, the delta variant will decimate the country or the continent. That's exactly what happened in India, we may have lost nearly 4-5 million people in India due to the COVID pandemic.

So we know how devastatin­g delta can be, and here we have a population in rich countries where 80% might be vaccinated, so getting an additional boost of protection, increasing the efficacy by a few percentage points in rich countries, versus taking those vaccines and vaccinatin­g completely unvaccinat­ed vulnerable people — is not even a question. The public health map clearly tells you vaccinatin­g the unvaccinat­ed is always more impactful than boosting somebody who's already pretty much protected.

So it's your view that as long as there are people in the world who want a vaccine and have not gotten one, we shouldn't be o ering boosters to anyone?

Except the ser iously immunocomp­romised people. That's the group for which the US Food and Drug Administra­tion (USFDA) just announced last week, that it's okay to give the third boosters, but not on a population-wide basis. That's where my biggest concern is. If Canada, America, Germany, Israel, we all start vaccinatin­g ourselves again and again and again, we will have taken a giant share of the vaccine supply away from the hands of low- and middle-income countries. That's the brutal reality.

Do you have any hope that surplus vaccines in some countries can be redistribu­ted?

I'm quite despondent. I'm not seeing any enlightene­d leadership from the G7 or G20, or any rich nation for that matter. I think we've lost the plot on global solidarity. I think global solidarity is a lie. It's a kind of buzzword people throw around but we really don't mean it in our actions.

 ??  ?? Many people in poorer countries are still waiting for their first COVID-19 jab
Many people in poorer countries are still waiting for their first COVID-19 jab

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