Daily Observer (Jamaica)

Haiti gets 500,000 COVID-19 vaccine doses

...its first of the pandemic

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PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (AP) — Haiti on Wednesday received its first novel coronaviru­s vaccine since the pandemic began, welcoming 500,000 doses as the country battles a spike in cases and deaths.

The Pan American Health Organizati­on said the United States donated the doses via the United Nations’ COVAX programme for low-income countries.

Spokeswoma­n Nadia Peimbert-rappaport told The Associated Press that the shipment contained the Moderna vaccine.

“The arrival of these vaccines is quite promising and now the challenge is to get them to the people that need them the most,” the regional health agency’s director, Dr Carissa Etienne, said in a statement.

The doses will be administer­ed for free, said Dr Marie Gréta Roy Clément, Haiti’s minister of public health and population.

“This first allocation of vaccines puts an end to a long period of waiting, an end to a long period of waiting not only for the Haitian population, but also for the people of the region who were very concerned that Haiti was the only country in the Americas that had not yet introduced the COVID-19 vaccine,” she said in a statement.

Haiti has reported more than 19,300 confirmed coronaviru­s cases and more than 480 deaths as it fights a wave of COVID-19 cases that has forced hospitals to turn away patients. Experts believe those numbers are widely underrepor­ted since there is scant testing in Haiti, which has more than 11 million people.

Some 756,000 doses of Astrazenec­a shots had been slated to arrive in May via the COVAX programme but were delayed given the Government’s concern over

possible clotting as a side effect and a lack of infrastruc­ture to keep the vaccines properly refrigerat­ed.

The Pan American Health Organizati­on has said it would help Haiti’s Health Ministry solve those problems and would prioritise vaccinatin­g health workers.

It was not immediatel­y known when inoculatio­ns would begin and where.

Experts have previously warned of potential problems that could complicate vaccinatio­n efforts, including a surge in gang violence that has people afraid to leave their homes or travel to certain areas because they fear for their lives.

Haiti is also now reeling from the July 7 assassinat­ion of President Jovenel Moïse.

Moïse had declared a health emergency on May 24 and imposed a curfew and safety measures, including mandating the use of face masks when entering businesses. But few Haitians are following the measures while buying groceries in bustling marketplac­es or riding in crowded colourful buses known as tap taps.

Last month, the non-profit St Luke Foundation for Haiti said the country’s lack of security was interferin­g with oxygen being imported as a liquid, then being converted to gas and delivered.

“It is hard and dangerous work to refill 320 tanks per day in the red zones of Portau-prince,” it said.

 ?? (Photo: AP) ?? Neighbours stand on a roof in Port-au-prince, Haiti, on July 12, 2021.
(Photo: AP) Neighbours stand on a roof in Port-au-prince, Haiti, on July 12, 2021.
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 ?? (Photo: AFP) ?? A woman braids a person’s hair in Place Saintpierr­e, in Petionvill­e, Port-au-prince, on July 13, 2021.
(Photo: AFP) A woman braids a person’s hair in Place Saintpierr­e, in Petionvill­e, Port-au-prince, on July 13, 2021.

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