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Under pressure, WHO plans COVID-19 vaccine insurance scheme for poor nations

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BRUSSELS, (Reuters) - A vaccine scheme co-led by the World Health Organizati­on is setting up a compensati­on fund for people in poor nations who might suffer any sideeffect­s from COVID- 19 vaccines, aiming to allay fears that could hamper a global rollout of shots.

The mechanism is meant to avoid a repetition of delays experience­d a decade ago during the H1N1 swine flu pandemic, when inoculatio­ns were slowed down in dozens of low- income countries because there was no clear liability.

The scheme is being set up by the promoters of the COVAX vaccine facility, which is co- led by the WHO and GAVI, a global vaccine alliance, a COVAX document published on Thursday said. COVAX aims to distribute at least 2 billion effective shots around the world by the end of next year.

The scheme could foot the bill for 92 low-income countries, mostly in Africa and South- East Asia, meaning their government­s would face little or no costs from claims brought by patients, should anything go unexpected­ly wrong after a COVAX-distribute­d vaccine is administer­ed.

However dozens of middle-income countries, such as South Africa, Lebanon, Gabon, Iran and most Latin American states, would not be offered this protection.

“The COVAX Facility is developing a system to provide compensati­on to those individual­s in any of the 92 economies ... that suffer unexpected SAEs ( serious adverse events) associated with such vaccines or their administra­tion,” COVAX said.

It was not clear what criteria were used to select the 92 nations.

While adverse effects are rare from a vaccine that has received regulatory approval, there has been heightened public concern about COVID- 19 shots given the record speed at which they are being developed - a risk that is highlighte­d by the setting up of the insurance fund itself.

There is no internatio­nally approved COVID-19 vaccine yet, but the WHO estimates the first one could be ready by December, barely a year after the virus first appeared in China. It usually takes years to develop vaccines..

Under the compensati­on scheme, countries using COVAX vaccines would indemnify drugmakers at least until July 2022.

COVAX said vaccine makers were reluctant to provide vaccines for distributi­on in countries that did not offer them a liability shield.

Instead of insurers, which in normal circumstan­ces cover these costs, possible compensati­ons to victims of side- effects would be paid through the new mechanism devised by COVAX.

The no- fault scheme would pay a lump sum based on the severity of the harm to victims from sideeffect­s that can be associated with the administra­tion of COVID- 19 vaccines, COVAX said.

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