China Daily

Long-awaited start on jabs aid plan hailed Unrealisti­c expectatio­ns

WHO takes heart from first shots handed out under equitable vaccines initiative

- By CHEN WEIHUA in Brussels chenweihua@chinadaily.com.cn Xinhua and agencies contribute­d to this story.

The World Health Organizati­on on Monday applauded the start of COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns through the global initiative COVAX, though it warned the coronaviru­s crisis will likely persist into next year.

Ghana and Cote d’lvoire on Monday became the first countries to begin vaccinatio­n campaigns with doses supplied through the WHObacked initiative that aims to ensure equitable access to COVID19 vaccines.

“It’s encouragin­g to see health workers in lower-income countries starting to be vaccinated, but it’s regrettabl­e that this comes almost three months after some of the wealthiest countries started their vaccinatio­n campaigns,” WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s told a virtual news conference.

Ghana’s President Nana AkufoAddo on Monday became the first recipient of a coronaviru­s vaccine under the global vaccine program.

Aside from the doses given to Ghana and Cote d’lvoire, a further 11 million doses will be delivered this week under COVAX. By the end of May, 237 million doses of vaccines will be allocated to 142 economies and countries participat­ing in COVAX, according to the WHO.

The deliveries to the two West African nations mark the start of what has been described as the largest, most rapid and complex global rollout of vaccines in history. COVAX aims to deliver at least 2 billion doses of COVID-19 vaccines by the end of 2021, including at least 1.3 billion to the 92 low-income economies.

Countries that made early starts on vaccinatio­n are ramping up their efforts. In the United States, 3.9 million doses of the one-shot Johnson & Johnson vaccine are due to be delivered after it became the third jab approved by US regulators.

Also on Monday came the latest in a string of positive news about the available vaccines: a British study showed that the Pfizer and AstraZenec­a vaccines were “highly effective” in preventing serious illness in older people, with a more than 80 percent reduction in hospitaliz­ation.

The study’s release came just hours before France authorized the AstraZenec­a vaccine for people over 65, reversing a decision that had excluded this age group.

Germany is also believed to be reconsider­ing its refusal to authorize the vaccine for the elderly over earlier concerns over its efficacy.

Despite the promising signs from vaccines, Mike Ryan, the executive director of the WHO’s Health Emergencie­s Programme, said it was “unrealisti­c to think that we’re going to finish with this virus by the end of the year”.

Tedros said the WHO and its partners in COVAX will continue to work day and night toward the vision of seeing vaccinatio­ns start in every country within the first 100 days of this year.

“There are now 40 days left. We can only realize this vision with the support and cooperatio­n of all partners,” he said.

After six weeks of seeing a decline in new COVID-19 cases, the WHO reported an increase last week. They were logged in four of the agency’s six administra­tive regions: the Americas, Europe, Southeast Asia and the Eastern Mediterran­ean.

In Brazil, health officials are urging nationwide lockdowns and curfews because hospitals are running short of intensive-care unit beds as COVID-19 claims more than 1,000 lives each day in the country.

“This is disappoint­ing, but not surprising,” Tedros said. “Vaccines alone will not keep you safe.”

However, Ryan noted that it is possible to slash the hospitaliz­ations, deaths and tragedies associated with the pandemic given the vaccines, other tools and measures that could help keep the transmissi­ons low.

He spoke of taking “the fear and tragedies out of the pandemic”.

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