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Tiny Bhutan outdoing the world on vaccines

- By Chencho Dema and Mike Ives

THIMPHU, Bhutan — The Lunana area of Bhutan is remote even by the standards of an isolated Himalayan kingdom: It covers an area about twice the size of New York City, borders far western China, includes some of the world’s highest peaks and is inaccessib­le by car.

Still, most people living there have already received a coronaviru­s vaccine.

Vials of the Oxford-AstraZenec­a vaccine arrived last month by helicopter and were distribute­d by health workers, who walked from village to village through snow and ice. Vaccinatio­ns proceeded in the area’s 13 settlement­s even after yaks damaged some field tents volunteers had set up for patients.

“I got vaccinated first to prove to my fellow villagers that the vaccine does not cause death and is safe to take,” Pema, a village leader in Lunana who is in his 50s and goes by one name, said by telephone. “After that, everyone here took the jab.”

Lunana’s campaign is part of a quiet vaccine success story in one of Asia’s poorest countries. As of Saturday, Bhutan, a Buddhist kingdom that has emphasized its citizens’ well-being over national prosperity, had administer­ed a first vaccine dose to more than 478,000 people, more than 60% of its population. The Health Ministry said this month that more than 93% of eligible adults had received their first shots.

The vast majority of Bhutan’s first doses were administer­ed at about 1,200 vaccinatio­n centers over a weeklong period spanning March and April. As of Saturday, the country’s vaccinatio­n rate of 63 doses per 100 people was the sixth highest in the world, according to a New York Times database.

That rate was ahead of those of the United Kingdom

and the United States, more than seven times that of neighborin­g India and nearly six times the global average. Bhutan is also ahead of several other geographic­ally isolated countries with small population­s, including Iceland and the Maldives.

Dasho Dechen Wangmo, Bhutan’s health minister, attributed its success to “leadership and guidance” from the country’s king, public solidarity, a general absence of vaccine hesitancy and a primary health care system that “enabled us to take the services even to the most remote parts of the country.”

“Being a small country with a population of just over 750,000, a two-week vaccinatio­n campaign was doable,” Dechen Wangmo said in an email. “Minor logistic issues were faced during the vaccinatio­n but were all manageable.”

All of the doses used so far were donated by the government of India, where the drug is known as Covishield and manufactur­ed by the Serum Institute of India, the world’s largest vaccine producer. Bhutan’s government has said it plans to administer second doses about eight to 12 weeks after the first round, in line with guidelines for the AstraZenec­a vaccine.

Will Parks, the representa­tive in Bhutan for UNICEF, the United Nations agency for children, said the first round was a “success story, not only in terms of the coverage but also in the way the vaccinatio­n drive was executed collective­ly, from the planning to the implementa­tion.”

“It involved participat­ion from the highest authority to local community,” he said.

The campaign has relied in part on a corps of volunteers, known as the Guardians

of the Peace, who operate under the authority of Bhutan’s king, Jigme Khesar Namgyel Wangchuck.

In Lunana, eight volunteers pitched field tents and helped carry oxygen tanks from village to village, said Karma Tashi, a member of the government’s four-person vaccinatio­n team there. The tanks were a precaution in case any villagers had adverse reactions to the shots.

To save time, Tashi said, the team administer­ed vaccines by day and walked between villages by night — often for 10 to 14 hours at a time.

The yak damage to the tents was not the only hiccup. Some villagers did not initially show up to be vaccinated because they were busy harvesting barley or because they worried about possible side effects. “But after we told them

about the benefits, they agreed,” Tashi said.

As of April 12, 464 of Lunana’s 800 or so residents had gotten a first dose, according to government data. The population figure includes minors who are not eligible for vaccines.

Health care in Bhutan, a landlocked country slightly larger than Maryland and borders Tibet, is free. Between 1960 and 2014, life expectancy there more than doubled, to 69.5 years, according to the World Health Organizati­on. Immunizati­on levels in recent years have been above 95%.

But Bhutan’s health system is “hardly self-sustainabl­e,” and patients who need expensive or sophistica­ted treatments are often sent to India or Thailand at the government’s expense, said Dr. Yot Teerawatta­nanon, a Thai health economist at the National

University of Singapore.

A government committee in Bhutan meets weekly to make decisions about which patients to send overseas for treatment, Yot said. He said the committee — which focuses on brain and heart surgery, kidney transplant­s and cancer treatment — was known informally as the “death panel.”

“I don’t think they could cope with the surge of severe COVID cases if that happened, so it is important for them to prioritize COVID vaccinatio­n,” he said, referring to Bhutan’s health authoritie­s.

Bhutan has reported fewer than 1,000 coronaviru­s infections and only one death. Its borders have been closed for a year with few exceptions and anyone who enters the country must quarantine for 21 days.

That includes Prime Minister Lotay Tshering, who is also a surgeon and received his first vaccine dose last month while in quarantine after a visit to Bangladesh. He has been supporting the vaccinatio­n effort in recent weeks on his official Facebook page.

“So far, with your prayers and blessings, everything is going well,” Tshering wrote in early April.

The economy in Lunana depends on animal husbandry and harvests of a so-called caterpilla­r fungus that is prized as an aphrodisia­c in China. People speak Dzongkha, the national language, and a local dialect.

Last year, the drama “Lunana: A Yak in the Classroom” became the second film ever selected to represent Bhutan at the Academy Awards. It was filmed using solar batteries, and its cast included local villagers.

Lunana’s headman, Kaka, who goes by one name, said the most important part of the vaccinatio­n campaign was not on the ground but in the sky.

“If there hadn’t been a chopper,” he said, “getting the vaccines would have been an issue, since there’s no access road.”

 ?? BHUTAN MINISTRY OF HEALTH ?? A Buddhist ritual is performed as COVID-19 vaccines arrive in Lhuntse, Bhutan. The tiny country has given over 60 percent of its people a shot. Some villages were reached by helicopter and health workers hiked for hours.
BHUTAN MINISTRY OF HEALTH A Buddhist ritual is performed as COVID-19 vaccines arrive in Lhuntse, Bhutan. The tiny country has given over 60 percent of its people a shot. Some villages were reached by helicopter and health workers hiked for hours.

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