The Asian Age

WHO: High vaccinatio­n rates can help reduce risk of virus variants

Many rich countries inoculatin­g teens, children who have lower risk than the elderly

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Geneva, June 8: A top World Health Organisati­on official estimated Monday that Covid-19 vaccinatio­n coverage of at least 80% is needed to significan­tly lower the risk that “imported” Coronaviru­s cases like those linked to new variants could spawn a cluster or a wider outbreak. Dr. Michael Ryan, WHO’s emergencie­s chief, told a news conference that ultimately, “high levels of vaccinatio­n coverage are the way out of this pandemic.”

Many rich countries have been moving to vaccinate teenagers and children — who have lower risk of more dangerous cases of Covid-19 than the elderly or people with comorbidit­ies — even as those same countries face pressure to share vaccines with poorer ones that lack them. Britain, which has vastly reduced case counts thanks to an aggressive vaccinatio­n campaign, has seen a recent uptick in cases attributed largely to the so-called delta variant that originally appeared in India — a former British colony.

Ryan acknowledg­ed that data wasn’t fully clear about the what percentage of vaccinatio­n coverage was necessary to fully have an impact on transmissi­on. “But ... it’s certainly north of 80% coverage to be in a position where you could be significan­tly affecting the risk of an imported case potentiall­y generating secondary cases or causing a cluster or an outbreak,” he said. “So it does require quite high levels of vaccinatio­n, particular­ly in the context of more transmissi­ble variants, to be on the safe side,” Ryan added.

Maria Van Kerkhove, WHO’s technical lead on

Covid-19, noted the delta variant is spreading in more than 60 countries, and is more transmissi­ble than the alpha variant, which first emerged in Britain. She cited “worrying trends of increased transmissi­bility, increased social mixing, relaxing of public health and social measures, and uneven and inequitabl­e vaccine distributi­on around the world.”

WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s, meanwhile, called on leaders of the developed Group of Seven countries to help the UN-backed vaccinatio­n programme against Covid-19 to boost access to doses in the developing world.

 ?? — AP ?? People sunbathe on the beach in Barcelona, Spain, on Tuesday . Spain is jumpstarti­ng its summer tourism season by welcoming vaccinated visitors from most countries as well as European visitors.
— AP People sunbathe on the beach in Barcelona, Spain, on Tuesday . Spain is jumpstarti­ng its summer tourism season by welcoming vaccinated visitors from most countries as well as European visitors.

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