The Pak Banker

COVID immunity is at risk

- Seth Berkley

President Biden has declared that to vaccinate the world "we need to go big." I couldn't agree more - but that means we need to move faster than we have to date, or even his target of fully vaccinatin­g 70 percent of the world by this time next year won't be enough.

We still don't really know what herd immunity looks like for COVID-19, but we do know that unless we start to make these vaccines immediatel­y more available to people in lower income countries, not only will this target be difficult to achieve, but, given that vaccine immunity may wane over time, it risks underminin­g its impact.

Protecting more people will save more lives and should help reduce transmissi­on, but it's important to remember that it is still not clear how long COVID-19 vaccines remain effective. That means, the sooner they reach people in all corners of the world, the greater their overall, long-term impact. Because if people in poorest countries continue to be left out and don't get access to these vaccines until the very end, then by the time we reach this target, which the World Health Organizati­on has also called for, we could start to see protection wane in other regions.

The point is that we don't just need to get 70 percent of the world fully vaccinated: To have the most impact, ideally, we also need 70 percent protected at the same time.

The danger here is that leaving large population­s around the world unprotecte­d, waiting for natural immunity to slowly build, allows time and opportunit­y for the virus to continue to circulate and increases the risk of new and potentiall­y more dangerous variants emerging. It would mean that a year from now, instead of potentiall­y entering the pandemic endgame, we could find ourselves at the start of a new and perpetual cycle of revaccinat­ion or boosters for people who have already previously been protected.

To avoid that, we need to be smart and take a phased approach.

Until now, government­s have tried to tackle the pandemic at the national level, striving to achieve high vaccinatio­n coverage within their own borders, which has only prolonged the pandemic.

But now, instead of trying to extinguish this global inferno one country at a time, we have to start simultaneo­usly stamping it out all across the world. That means focusing all efforts on building up global coverage by vaccinatin­g people everywhere who are still unprotecte­d, in particular getting first doses out to people most at risk, such as health workers, the elderly and other vulnerable people.

With 1.5 billion doses of COVID-19 vaccine now being produced every month, there should be enough vaccines to make this happen, with global production expected to reach 12 billion doses by the end of the year - enough to protect every adult on this planet. But one look at the global distributi­on of COVID-19 vaccines and it's clear we are still a long way from that. While some high-income countries have already protected nearly 70 percent of their population, only 2.5 percent in the very poorest low-income countries have been protected.

COVAX was created to address precisely this by making access to people in all countries equitable. Despite unpreceden­ted challenges, we have delivered more than 361 million doses to 144 economies, the majority going to people in the 92 poorest nations. And by the end of the year, we hope to have made 1.4 billion doses available, increasing to 4.4 billion through 2022.

However, we have faced, and continue to face, ongoing obstacles, with wealthy countries monopolizi­ng global supply, while export restrictio­ns hinder the free flow of vaccines, and the vital components and materials needed to make them. Manufactur­ers have also experience­d problems. All this has created delays and slowed progress, which is one reason why there are still such huge and unacceptab­le global disparitie­s. And now, global supply could be hit further as some wealthy government­s start to introduce booster shots for low-risk people who are already fully vaccinated, despite a lack of firm evidence to support their use right now.

 ?? ?? ‘‘And now, global supply could be hit further as some wealthy government­s start to introduce booster shots for low-risk people who are already fully vaccinated, despite a lack of firm evidence to support their use
right now.”
‘‘And now, global supply could be hit further as some wealthy government­s start to introduce booster shots for low-risk people who are already fully vaccinated, despite a lack of firm evidence to support their use right now.”

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