Marin Independent Journal

Sidelining experts, Brazil bungled its immunizati­on plans

- By Diane Jeantet and Débora Álvares

RIO DE JANEIRO » Like many Brazilian public health experts, Dr. Regina Flauzino spent most of 2020 watching with horror as COVID-19 devastated Brazil. When the opportunit­y to join the government’s vaccinatio­n effort came, she was thrilled: She would be able to share her decades of on-the-ground experience.

But her excitement quickly faded. Flauzino, an epidemiolo­gist who worked on Brazilian vaccine campaigns for 20 years, became frustrated with what she described as a rushed, chaotic process.

The government has yet to approve a single vaccine, and Health Ministry officials have ignored outside experts’ advice. Shortly after the government presented its vaccinatio­n plan, more than a quarter of the roughly 140 experts involved demanded their names be excised.

“We weren’t listened to,” Flauzino told The Associated Press. The plan’s creation “was postponed for too long and now it’s being done in a rush.”

Brazil has suffered more than 200,000 COVID-19 deaths, the second-highest total in the world after the United States, with infections and deaths surging again. Despite a half-century of successful vaccinatio­n programs, the federal government is trailing regional and global peers in both approving vaccines and cobbling together an immunizati­on strategy.

The AP interviewe­d four expert committee members and four former Health Ministry officials. They criticized the government’s unjustifia­ble delay in formulatin­g a vaccinatio­n plan, as well as months spent focused on a single vaccine manufactur­er.

They also complained of President Jair Bolsonaro underminin­g the ministry’s effectiven­ess, pointing to the removal of highly trained profession­als from leadership positions, who were replaced with military appointees with little or no public health experience. Experts also blamed the president, a far-right former army captain, for fueling anti-vaccine sentiment in Brazil, compromisi­ng the mass immunizati­on effort.

‘Still waiting’

The government’s COVID-19 immunizati­on plan, finally released on Dec. 16, lacked essential details: How many doses would be sent to each state and how would they be refrigerat­ed and delivered? How many profession­als would need to be hired and trained — and, above all, how much funding would governors receive to implement the campaign? The plan did not include a start date.

“How is each state going to organize its campaign if it doesn’t know how many doses it is going to receive, and the timeline for delivery?” said Dr. Carla Domingues, an epidemiolo­gist who oversaw the logistics of Brazil’s 2009 H1N1 vaccine campaign, and worked on more than a dozen other vaccinatio­n efforts.

Bolsonaro’s press office and the Health Ministry did not respond to AP requests for comment about Brazil’s vaccinatio­n campaign or why more contracts with vaccine manufactur­ers were not signed in 2020.

The Health Ministry’s National Immunizati­on Program has a long history of success. Created over 40 years ago, it has enabled Brazil to eradicate polio and significan­tly reduce measles, rubella, tetanus and diphtheria. The effort won recognitio­n from UNICEF for reaching the vast country’s most remote corners and has contribute­d to extending Brazilians’ life expectancy from 60 to over 75 years.

The program “is the central axis of all vaccinatio­n campaigns in the country,” Flauzino said.

That is no small task in a nation of 210 million people, the world’s sixth-largest population. The program provides a complex blueprint for vaccinatio­n campaigns across more than 5,500 municipali­ties in 26 states and the federal district.

In a Dec. 1 Zoom meeting, Health Ministry officials presented the experts with a general overview of the COVID-19 vaccinatio­n plan. The consultant­s the AP interviewe­d said it became abundantly clear the ministry was incapable of providing many crucial details.

Epidemiolo­gist Dr. Ethel Maciel, who was among those who later demanded her name be removed from the plan, said many of the experts’ recommenda­tions weren’t implemente­d, including obtaining vaccines from more than one manufactur­er. But neither she nor other consultant­s could voice their concerns.

“They didn’t let us talk during this meeting, our microphone­s remained on mute,” Maciel said, adding that officials instructed them to send their comments in writing, and that they would receive a response within a week.

“To this day, we’re still waiting,” she said.

Syringe shortage

Maciel was also shocked to hear that five months after the ministry signed its first contract to obtain vaccine doses in June — up to 210 million of the AstraZenec­a and University of Oxford shot — it still hadn’t secured syringes to administer them.

The Health Ministry published its tender for 331 million syringes in midDecembe­r, but received bids for only 8 million by its Dec. 29 deadline. Brazilian syringe manufactur­ers complained the government’s price limit was below market value.

State health secretarie­s had for months warned the federal government about the need to buy syringes as soon as possible to avoid excessive pricing, but to no avail, said Carlos Lula, chair of the National Council of Health Secretarie­s.

“It took too long,” Lula said. Dozens of other countries are already vaccinatin­g, “and we’re falling behind.”

 ?? ERALDO PERES — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? On Dec. 23, a woman participat­es in a protest against Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro’s handling of the new coronaviru­s pandemic in Brazilia, Brazil. The country hasn’t approved a single vaccine yet, and independen­t health experts who participat­ed in its immunizati­on program say the plan is still incomplete, at best.
ERALDO PERES — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE On Dec. 23, a woman participat­es in a protest against Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro’s handling of the new coronaviru­s pandemic in Brazilia, Brazil. The country hasn’t approved a single vaccine yet, and independen­t health experts who participat­ed in its immunizati­on program say the plan is still incomplete, at best.

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