Santa Cruz Sentinel

Poor countries face wait for vaccines

- By Maria Cheng and Aniruddha Ghosal

NEW DELHI >> With Americans, Britons and Canadians rolling up their sleeves to receive coronaviru­s vaccines, the route out of the pandemic now seems clear to many in the West, even if the rollout will take many months. But for poorer countries, the road will be far longer and rougher.

The ambitious initiative known as COVAX created to ensure the entire world has access to COVID-19 vaccines has secured only a fraction of the 2 billion doses it hopes to buy over the next year, has yet to confirm any actual deals to ship out vaccines and is short on cash.

The virus that has killed more than 1.6 million people has exposed vast inequities between countries, as fragile health systems and smaller economies were often hit harder. COVAX was set up by the World Health Organizati­on, vaccines alliance GAVI and CEPI, a global coalition to fight epidemics, to avoid the internatio­nal stampede for vaccines that has accompanie­d past outbreaks and would reinforce those imbalances.

But now some experts say the chances that coronaviru­s shots will be shared fairly between rich nations and the rest are fading fast. With vaccine supplies currently limited, developed countries, some of which helped fund the research with taxpayer money, are under tremendous pressure to protect their own population­s and are buying up shots. Meanwhile, some poorer countries that signed up to the initiative are looking for alternativ­es because of fears it won’t deliver.

“It’s simple math,” said Arnaud Bernaert, head of global health at the World Economic Forum. Of the approximat­ely 12 billion doses the pharmaceut­ical industry is expected to produce next year, about 9 billion shots have already been reserved by rich countries.

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 ?? JEROME DELAY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Volunteers wait to be checked at a vaccine trial facility for AstraZenec­a at Soweto’s Chris Sani Baragwanat­h Hospital outside Johannesbu­rg, South Africa, on Nov. 30.
JEROME DELAY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Volunteers wait to be checked at a vaccine trial facility for AstraZenec­a at Soweto’s Chris Sani Baragwanat­h Hospital outside Johannesbu­rg, South Africa, on Nov. 30.

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