New Era

Govt to spend N$580m on vaccines

… as WHO hails Namibia’s vaccinatio­n plan

- Paheja Siririka

Health minister Dr Kalumbi Shangula yesterday said the country anticipate­s spending about N$583 million on the Covid-19 vaccinatio­n rollout plan to enable to achieve 60% coverage of the population.

Shangula said the figure includes N$484 million reserved for the actual procuremen­t of the vaccines. Shangula yesterday announced the country’s deployment and vaccinatio­n plan is complete and approved by the World Health Organisati­on (WHO).

Shangula said he was unfortunat­ely not at liberty to disclose the exact date of the rolling out and arrival of the vaccines but the first batch is expected to be in the country next month.

“This vaccinatio­n plan is indicating the steps that need to be taken, which ranges from the training of people who are going to do the vaccinatio­n to the budget, distributi­on, logistics and everything associated with vaccinatin­g people.

“This is the same process that happened when the polio vaccinatio­n campaign took place,” he detailed.

Shangula said once the vaccine arrives, teams will be distribute­d to different places where citizens will be receiving their vaccinatio­n.

“Logistical­ly, there will be vaccine points where people will go,” said Shangula.

The executive director in the health ministry Ben Nangome told New Era that at this point, they are unable to disclose the vaccinatio­n plan, as it is not a public document.

“It is not a public document yet, so once it is cleared for public consumptio­n, it will be shared because it has to go to stakeholde­rs and has to be shared with the regions – everyone will have it,” said Nangombe.

He added the plan is a document of more than 90 pages, covering all the basics about how the vaccinatio­n is going to be rolled out, human resources needs, required training and reporting of adverse events.

“The document also covers the communicat­ion strategy to sensitise members of the public and inform them about the correct informatio­n. It is an extensive document. The WHO has indicated that Namibia’s plan is one of the best and it is going to be used as an example to other countries that have not completed their plan. That was WHO and other stakeholde­rs signing off but we, internally, are in the process of preparing it for public release. That process is not complete yet,” stated Nangombe.

Apart from Covax facility and manufactur­ers of Covid-19 vaccines in China, Russian, India and the United States, Namibia is also working with the Africa Medicines Supply Platform (AMSP) to procure additional doses of Covid-19 vaccines.

“Thousands of these frontline workers have put their lives on the line for our sake. Many have been infected with Covid-19 in the line of duty. Some have fallen severely ill – and regrettabl­y, some have lost their lives. Their deaths should not be in vain,” Shangula said.

He said the developmen­t of vaccines against Covid-19 has created a new sense of optimism and urged Namibians to welcome and embrace the vaccinatio­n campaign like the rest of humanity.

President Hage Geingob yesterday announced the Indian government has pledged 30 000 doses of vaccines from the Serum Institute of India, while the Chinese last week pledged 100 000 doses of the Sinopharm vaccine.

According to Shangula, efficacy of the Sinopharm vaccine stood at 80%, adding that the country is also in talks with Russia to acquire the vaccine Sputnik, which is more than 90% efficient.

The Namibian reported that the vaccine (Sputnik) requires large doses; therefore, it makes it ideal for big demands on the manufactur­ing and quantitati­on required for rollout on a global scale.

Furthermor­e, Geingob also said until a safe and effective vaccine becomes available in Namibia, the restrictio­ns imposed to curbing the virus and continued public vigilance and diligence to the regulation­s remain the only line of defines. “Government remains seized with procuring vaccines for the Namibian people. We are engaged with our friends in the internatio­nal arena at various levels to expedite this process,” he assured.

 ?? Photo: Nampa/AFP ?? Sought-after… A health worker prepares a dose of the Russian Sputnik V coronaviru­s vaccine at the Itauguá National Hospital in Itaugua in Paraguay. Namibia has turned to Russia to procure the sought-after vaccine.
Photo: Nampa/AFP Sought-after… A health worker prepares a dose of the Russian Sputnik V coronaviru­s vaccine at the Itauguá National Hospital in Itaugua in Paraguay. Namibia has turned to Russia to procure the sought-after vaccine.
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