Hamilton Journal News

WHO chief: Blanket booster drives risk prolonging pandemic

He says they divert supply, efforts from needier nations.

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BERLIN — The head of the World Health Organizati­on warned Wednesday that blanket booster programs in rich countries risk prolonging the world’s battle with COVID-19 and said that “no country can boost its way out of the pandemic.”

WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s said the priority must be to reduce deaths and help all countries meet minimum vaccinatio­n targets that many still haven’t reached. And he noted that “the vast majority of hospi- talization­s and deaths are in unvaccinat­ed people, not unboosted people.”

Tedros said that, while vaccines have saved many lives this year, their unequal sharing “has cost many lives.” In 2021, 3.5 million people were lost to COVID19, he said, and “all of us need to take extra precaution­s” as the new omicron variant advances.

The WHO chief has previously called for a morato- rium on boosters for healthy adults until the end of this year to counter unequal global vaccine distributi­on. He said at an online news conference Wednesday that about 20% of vaccine doses being given every day are currently boosters or additional doses.

“Blanket booster progra ms are likely to prolong the pandemic rather than ending it, by diverting supply to countries that already have high levels of vaccinatio­n coverage, giving the virus more opportunit­y to spread and mutate,” Tedros added.

He said it’s “frankly difficult to understand” that three-quarters of health workers in Africa remain unvaccinat­ed, and distortion­s in global supply mean that o nly half of WHO’s member countries have been able to meet a target of vaccinatin­g 40% of their population­s by the end of this year.

Tedros renewed a call for manufactur­ers and other countries to prioritize the COVAX program to get doses to needier nations and “work together to support those who are furthest behind.”

“Unless we vaccinate the whole world ... I don’t think we can end this pandemic,” Tedros said. But he added that authoritie­s now know the virus better and have effective tools to fight it; “we need to add to that comprehens­ive implementa­tion and equity, and hope 2022 will end this pandemic.”

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