The Citizen (Gauteng)

Nations roll out vaccinatio­ns

PFIZER: ‘SIGNIFICAN­TLY’ SCALES UP PRODUCTION India gets off to successful start with more than 224 000 people receiving jabs.

- Sao Paulo

The global Covid-19 vaccinatio­n drive gained pace on Sunday as Brazil gave its first injections and India pushed on with its massive campaign, while European authoritie­s sought to allay concerns about delays in supplies.

Brazil’s health regulator gave the green light for the Oxford-AstraZenec­a vaccine and China’s CoronaVac to be used as the Latin American giant suffers a devastatin­g second wave of the coronaviru­s.

Monica Calazans, a 54-year-old intensive care nurse in Sao Paulo, became the first person in Brazil to receive the Chinese CoronaVac jab after the Anvisa watchdog’s highly anticipate­d ruling.

Growing concerns over different strains of the virus have meanwhile prompted government­s to tighten curbs in a bid to stem a global death toll that has already surpassed two million.

India’s vaccinatio­n drive got off to a successful start on Saturday with more than 224 000 people receiving their first jabs and just three people hospitalis­ed after side-effects, the health ministry said on Sunday.

The government plans to immunise about 300 million people out of its population of 1.3 billion by July – equivalent to almost the entire US population.

In Europe, both France and Russia were gearing up for a key week in the vaccine effort.

Russia started mass immunisati­ons yesterday using its homegrown Sputnik V vaccine, while the French government is hoping to overcome fierce criticism of a sluggish roll-out as it begins inoculatin­g the over-75s.

Across the European Union, there have been concerns that delays in the delivery of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine could further slow a campaign which critics have condemned as less agile than in the United States or Britain, a recently-departed EU member.

US drugmaker Pfizer said it was working to “significan­tly” scale up production at its plant in Belgium in the second quarter.

After a short delay, deliveries should be back to the original schedule to the EU from 25 January.

Meanwhile, Joe Biden’s goal of seeing 100 million vaccine doses injected within his first 100 days in office is “absolutely” achievable, top US scientist Anthony Fauci said, days before he is to become the new president’s chief advisor on Covid-19. Biden has unveiled a $1.9 trillion stimulus plan to revive the economy.

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