New Era

LatAm government­s facing vaccine distributi­on challenges

- – Nampa/AFP

MONTEVIDEO - Cashstrapp­ed Latin American government­s face severe geographic­al, economic and social challenges in trying to ensure life-saving Covid-19 vaccines are made available to vulnerable population­s, experts say.

Megacities like Sao Paulo, mountain ranges like the Andes as well as the vast Amazon basin pose just a few of the geographic­al problems for distributo­rs, given the vital need to maintain the cold chain to preserve the vaccines.

Transporti­ng vaccines “to the most distant parts of the big cities and to peripheral neighbourh­oods, with the need to conserve the cold chain, will be the first major challenge,” Colombian epidemiolo­gist Carlos Trillos told AFP.

Government­s also face a race against time to provide training to those handling the doses throughout the cold chain, he said. Amazon basin countries had an early taste of the geographic­al challenges ahead for their vaccinatio­n campaigns, after health workers struggled to provide care for three million indigenous people scattered throughout the rainforest, an area almost seven times the size of Spain.

Vaccine campaigner­s also worry about rampant disinforma­tion in the continent worst-affected by the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Some 12.5 million of the 630 million Latin Americans have been infected with the coronaviru­s and at least 435,000 have died, a third of the total number of deaths worldwide, according to AFP figures based on official data. The process will be “challengin­g and costly” said Jarbas Barbosa, deputy director of the Pan American Health Organizati­on (PAHO).

The organizati­on expects to distribute vaccines in the region between March and May 2021 through Covax, a World Health Organizati­on initiative to guarantee equal access for impoverish­ed countries.

All Latin American and Caribbean countries have joined Covax, although some lack funds to purchase vaccines themselves, Barbosa said. In any case Covax will only provide enough vaccines for 10 to 20 percent of the population, forcing many government­s to sign separate bilateral agreements with laboratori­es and biotechnol­ogy companies.

Countries in the region are having to spend significan­t amounts of money on these pre-purchases just as they are experienci­ng historic economic contractio­ns from the impact of the pandemic.

Lower-income countries like Bolivia, Haiti, Guyana and several Caribbean island states are betting on the Covaxeligi­ble status to receive vaccines without contributi­ng funds. So is El Salvador, Honduras and Nicaragua, recently battered by Hurricanes Iota and Eta.

Covax’s latest projection­s estimate that vaccinatin­g just 20 percent of the region’s population will cost more than $2 billion. The vaccine will be free of charge, rolled out in a first phase for health profession­als, essential workers and, in some cases, older people or those with conditions that put them at risk of developing a serious case of Covid-19.

Storing and distributi­ng the vaccines is emerging as the main obstacl e . Among the companies leading the vaccine race, Pfizer/ BioNTech require their doses being stored at temperatur­es around - 70 degrees Celsius -- meaning they can only be distribute­d in large cities, experts said. Maintainin­g the cold chain “is a challenge for all countries” said Barbosa.

One positive is that “there are more than 100 vaccines in developmen­t ... the others that are closer to concluding clinical trials use the same cold chain that countries already use,” he said, in ranges of - 15 to -25 Celsius and 2 to 8 degrees Celsius.

Argentina, which has signed agreements that so far guarantee vaccines for 28 of its 44 million inhabitant­s, will deploy the army to ensure doses are distribute­d.

Peru, the Latin American country with the most deaths per million inhabitant­s (1,081), has so far secured 9.5 million vaccines and is negotiatin­g with laboratori­es to cover 24.5 million of its 31 million inhabitant­s.

Venezuela signed a deal with Russia to receive 10 million Sputnik V vaccines in the first quarter of 2021, and Caracas said mass vaccinatio­ns would begin in April.

However, according to Virgilio Vasquez, head of local NGO Doctors United, the problem in Venezuela goes far beyond doubts over the infrastruc­ture and equipment to support the cold chain.

“Vaccines have to reach not only large hospitals but also outpatient clinics in remote areas,” he said.

Even if health centers were to receive the necessary equipment to ensure safe vaccine storage, health workers “will still have serious electrical problems, with regions where the power goes out for hours every day.”

Vasquez, a specialist in e pi d e m i o l o g i c a l dat a processing, also said Venezuela’s vaccinatio­n campaigner­s will lack fuel to power vehicles needed to distribute the vaccine because of a severe gasoline shortage.

Brazil’s vaccine campaign was well set “to reach the most remote areas,” said Natalia Pasternak, microbiolo­gy professor at the University of Sao Paulo. However, the major obstacle therecould­comefrompa­ndemic skeptic President Jair Bolsonaro “and the eventual resistance of the population” to vaccinatio­n, she said.

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 ??  ?? Brazil President Jair Bolsonaro
Brazil President Jair Bolsonaro

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