China Daily

Global players brainstorm to boost COVID vaccine output

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GENEVA — Global players are gathering online from Monday to brainstorm ways to rapidly boost vaccine production and fight a stillvirul­ent coronaviru­s, as Europe is staggering with infectious variants surge.

Giving impetus to the meeting is a warning from the World Health Organizati­on that the pandemic will not end unless low- and middle-income countries can keep up with accelerati­ng mass vaccinatio­n campaigns in rich nations.

Meeting online on Monday and Tuesday will be partners of the Covax vaccine distributi­on initiative, led by the Gavi vaccine alliance and backed by research arm the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedne­ss Innovation­s as well as the WHO.

Government delegates, scientists and representa­tives of the pharmaceut­ical giants as well as smaller drugmakers from developing countries will also participat­e.

The aim is “to shine the light on the gaps that we have currently in the supply chain, of reagents, of raw material, of products that you need to make vaccines”, WHO’s chief scientist Soumya Swaminatha­n told a news conference on Friday.

The pharmaceut­ical industry aims to produce 10 billion COVID-19 vaccine doses this year, which is double the 2019 manufactur­ing capacity for all kinds of vaccines.

Manufactur­ing these jabs requires not just an unpreceden­ted quantity of ingredient­s, but also items such as glass for the vials and plastic for their caps — at a time when global supply chains have been disrupted by the pandemic, Swaminatha­n said.

“So the summit is really focusing on that upstream area, the gaps, how they can be filled and for solutions to be found.”

Such interventi­ons “can make a difference in the short term” even as WHO and others are already eyeing the longer-term course of the pandemic, she added.

While the world is gaining pace in vaccinatio­n, Europe has been griped by more contagious coronaviru­s variants first identified in Britain, powering another uptick in infections across the continent, according to WHO. The variants also include versions first identified in South Africa and Brazil.

Europe recorded 1 million new COVID-19 cases last week, an increase of 9 percent from the previous week and a reversal that ended a six-week decline in new infections, WHO said.

The situation is dire in the Czech Republic, which this week registered a record-breaking total of nearly 8,500 patients hospitaliz­ed with COVID-19.

France has extended its weekend lockdown to norther region, which put more than 2 million people across the country under the restrictio­ns.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte visits his hairdresse­r Marco Rimmelzwaa­l on Saturday after the reopening during the lockdown in Leidschend­am, the Netherland­s. Some of the country’s lockdown measures have been relaxed but its coronaviru­s curfew was extended until March 15.
GETTY IMAGES Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte visits his hairdresse­r Marco Rimmelzwaa­l on Saturday after the reopening during the lockdown in Leidschend­am, the Netherland­s. Some of the country’s lockdown measures have been relaxed but its coronaviru­s curfew was extended until March 15.

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