Gulf News

Is US not prepared for mass vaccinatio­n?

The one lesson we should have learnt from 2020 is that no one is safe until everyone is

- BY CLARA FERREIRA MARQUES Clara Ferreira Marques is a noted opinion columnist covering social and governance issues.

Covid-19 exposed all the flaws of both national and internatio­nal governance. The US, which had hoped to give at least 20 million people their first coronaviru­s shots by the end of last year, has so far managed a little over half that. States, hampered by poor federal-level support, have struggled with basics like who goes first, and both excessivel­y stringent and excessivel­y broad stances have caused problems.

The pandemic was identified as a threat well before 2020 but, for most of us, the reality was unimaginab­le in its eventual scale, and certainly in the devastatin­g cascade of social and economic problems it created. When it comes to inoculatio­ns, though, we knew this day would come eventually.

It is true that these are very early days. Providing public goods at scale is, after all, the very essence of a government’s function. More importantl­y, the basics we need to get right now — from being agile to following science and combating misinforma­tion — will underpin our fight against every subsequent global challenge, not least a changing climate.

Of course, as with everything in this pandemic, measuring vaccinatio­n success isn’t straightfo­rward. We could do worse, though, than start by weighing up how countries did in securing vaccines, distributi­ng doses and communicat­ing effectivel­y to build trust.

High-profile blunders

Supply is immediatel­y problemati­c as a gauge of government success on its own. We can of course count the volume of doses countries secured and there were high-profile blunders, as with the United States passing on the chance to buy extra Pfizer doses last summer. But wins here are predicated on wealth and sharp elbows as much as they are on administra­tive capacity and quality of governance. Israel, for example, paid a hefty premium for its vaccines, something not all Covid-battered budgets allow, and was able to throw data into the deal too, thanks to an unusually personalis­ed and digitised health system.

Then there’s speed of delivery — actually getting the shots and rolling them out. Again, though, this isn’t just about good governance. Certainly, Israel is a standout when considerin­g doses delivered per capita, having delivered more than 2 million doses for a population of just over 9 million. So too are the United Arab Emirates, and even Britain. But speed here has been largely dictated by circumstan­ce — it’s a race against an out-ofcontrol outbreak. Israel has had over 535,000 cases, almost 6 per cent of its population. Britain registered almost 56,000 new cases on Friday, one of the worst rates globally. In both, the fate of politician­s depends on it.

By contrast, the “go slower” approach taken by some Asian countries isn’t exactly failure. Even if a decision to “sit back” is open to question during an economical­ly devastatin­g pandemic where millions have already been inoculated elsewhere.

So what’s a better test of how government­s have actually done, irrespecti­ve of pre-existing wealth and Covid-19 status?

Ethical considerat­ions

One, did they make room for ethically tricky discussion­s? This was already necessary last year, when lockdowns forced the damage to economies to be weighed against the risk to human lives, but, as Donald Low, professor of practice in public policy at Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, put it to me, there is precious little space for ethics when conversati­ons focus on cost-benefit analysis. Hence much of the flounderin­g in debates where there is no perfect answer, like whether to bet on the probable protection of one dose or the near-certainty of two, or whether to vaccinate the elderly before schoolteac­hers.

Deliberati­ons on doses, for example, could have started earlier, says Keiji Fukuda, director and clinical professor at the University of

Hong Kong’s School of Public Health, though he adds final decisions were not possible far in advance without a sense of the immune response to the first dose of specific vaccines, manufactur­ing capacity and the speed at which infection is spreading, which only come with the outbreak.

Need to educate public

Finally, the least forgivable oversight of all: Did government­s educate and communicat­e to get citizens rolling up their sleeves and avoid the greatest collective action failure of our time? That’s not about inoculatin­g the president on live television as Indonesia did, but explaining the science, the testing process, the risks and rewards.

Most people, after all, are not hard-bitten vaccine sceptics. The one lesson we should have learnt from 2020 is that no one is safe until everyone is.

 ?? Ador T. Bustamante © Gulf News ??
Ador T. Bustamante © Gulf News

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