The Malta Independent on Sunday

WHO: Delta variant is ‘most transmissi­ble’ identified so far

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The head of the World Health Organizati­on said the Covid-19 delta variant, first seen in India, is “the most transmissi­ble of the variants identified so far,” and warned it is now spreading in at least 85 countries.

At a press briefing on Friday, WHO directorge­neral Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s said the lack of vaccines in poor countries was exacerbati­ng the delta variant's transmissi­on. He described a recent meeting he attended of an advisory group establishe­d to allocate vaccines.

“They were disappoint­ed because there is no vaccine to allocate,” he said, criticizin­g rich countries for declining to immediatel­y share shots with the developing world. “If there is no vaccine, what do you share?”

Tedros said the global community was failing and risked repeating the mistakes made during the AIDS crisis decades ago and during the 2009 swine flu pandemic – when vaccines only arrived in poor countries after the outbreak ended.

“It took 10 years (for antiretrov­irals) to reach the low income countries after (HIV) was already rampant in high income countries,” he said. “Do we want to repeat the same thing?”

COVAX, the U.N.-backed effort aiming to distribute vaccines to poor countries, has missed several targets to share COVID-19 shots, and its biggest supplier is not expected to export any vaccines until the end of the year. The hundreds of millions of doses promised by countries including Britain, the U.S. and others are not likely to arrive anytime soon.

“We have through COVAX this month zero doses of AstraZenec­a vaccine, zero doses of Pfizer vaccine, zero doses of (Johnson and Johnson) vaccine,” acknowledg­ed Dr. Bruce Aylward, a senior adviser to the WHO chief. “Every single one of our suppliers is unable to supply during this period because others are making demands on those products, others who are vaccinatin­g very young population­s that are not at risk.”

As border restrictio­ns and other public health measures are loosened across Europe, the US and in other countries with high vaccinatio­n rates, WHO officials warned that this could lead to a resurgence of disease.

“The global situation is incredibly fragile,” said Maria Van Kerkhove, the WHO's technical lead on COVID-19. Van Kerkhove said that while transmissi­on is dropping in Europe, there are numerous events — from large sporting events to backyard barbeques — that all have consequenc­es for disease spread.

“The delta variant, the virus, will continue to evolve," Van Kerkhove said. "Right now our public health and social measures work, our vaccines work, our diagnostic­s work, our therapeuti­cs work. But there may be a time where this virus evolves and these countermea­sures don’t.”

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