Texarkana Gazette

Some fear inequality in vaccine distibutio­n

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LONDON — Politician­s and public health leaders have publicly committed to equitably sharing any coronaviru­s vaccine that works, but the top global initiative to make that happen may allow rich countries to reinforce their own stockpiles while making fewer doses available for poor ones.

Activists warn that without stronger attempts to hold political, pharmaceut­ical and health leaders accountabl­e, vaccines will be hoarded by rich countries in an unseemly race to inoculate their population­s first. After the recent uproar over the United States purchasing a large amount of a new COVID-19 drug, some predict an even more disturbing scenario if a successful vaccine is developed.

Dozens of vaccines are being researched, and some countries — including Britain, France, Germany and the U.S. — already have ordered hundreds of millions of doses before the vaccines are even proven to work.

While no country can afford to buy doses of every potential vaccine candidate, many poor ones can’t afford to place such speculativ­e bets at all.

The key initiative to help them is led by Gavi, a public-private partnershi­p started by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation that buys vaccines for about 60% of the world’s children.

In a document sent to potential donors last month, Gavi said those giving money to its new “Covax Facility” would have “the opportunit­y to benefit from a larger portfolio of COVID-19 vaccines.” Gavi told donor government­s that when an effective vaccine is found within its pool of experiment­al shots, those countries would receive doses for 20% of their population. Those shots could be used as each nation wished.

That means rich countries can sign deals on their own with drugmakers and then also get no-strings-attached allocation­s from Gavi. Poorer countries that sign up to the initiative would theoretica­lly get vaccines at the same time to cover 20% of their population­s, but they would be obligated to immunize people according to an ethical distributi­on framework set by the United Nations.

The donor countries are “encouraged (but not required) to donate vaccines if they have more than they need,” the document says.

“By giving rich countries this backup plan, they’re getting their cake and eating it too,” said Anna Marriott of Oxfam Internatio­nal. “They may end up buying up all the supply in advance, which then limits what Gavi can distribute to the rest of the world.”

Dr. Seth Berkley, Gavi’s CEO, said such criticisms were unhelpful.

Right now there’s no vaccine for anyone, he said, and “we’re trying to solve that problem.”

Berkley said Gavi needed to make investing in a global vaccine initiative attractive for rich countries. Gavi would try to persuade those countries that if they ordered vaccines already, they should not attempt to obtain more, he said.

But he acknowledg­ed there was no enforcemen­t mechanism.

“If, at the end of the day, those legal agreements are broken or countries seize assets or don’t allow the provision of vaccines (to developing countries), that’s a problem,” Berkley said.

Gavi asked countries for an expression of intent from those interested in joining its initiative by last Friday. It had expected about four dozen high and middle income countries to sign up, in addition to nearly 90 developing countries.

Dr. Richard Hatchett, CEO of the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedne­ss Innovation­s, which is working with Gavi and others, said they would be talking in the coming weeks with countries who had signed deals with drug companies to secure their own supplies.

One possibilit­y: They might ask countries to contribute their private vaccine stockpile to the global pool in exchange for access to whichever experiment­al candidate proves effective.

“We’ll have to find a solution because some of these arrangemen­ts have been made and I think we have to be pragmatic about it,” he said.

After a vaccine meeting last month, the African Union said government­s should “remove all obstacles” to equal distributi­on of any successful vaccine.

Africa Centers for Disease Control and Prevention chief John Nkengasong said Gavi should be “pushing hard” on convincing companies to suspend their intellectu­al property rights.

“We don’t want to find ourselves in the HIV drugs situation,” he said, noting that the life-saving drugs were available in developed countries years before they made it to Africa.

Shabhir Mahdi, principal investigat­or of the Oxford vaccine trial in South Africa, said it was up to African government­s to push for more vaccine-sharing initiative­s, rather than depending on pharmaceut­ical companies to make their products more accessible.

“If you expect it to be the responsibi­lity of industry, you would never get a vaccine onto the African continent,” Mahdi said.

Last month, Gavi and CEPI signed a $750 million deal with AstraZenec­a to give developing countries 300 million doses of a shot being developed by Oxford University. But that deal happened after the drug company had already signed contracts with Britain and the U.S., who are first in line to get vaccine deliveries in the fall.

“We are working tirelessly to honor our commitment to ensure broad and equitable access to Oxford’s vaccine across the globe and at no profit,” said AstraZenec­a CEO Pascal Soriot. He said its contract with Gavi and CEPI marked “an important step in helping us supply hundreds of millions of people around the world, including to those in countries with the lowest means.”

Chinese President Xi Jinping has also vowed to share any COVID-19 vaccine it develops with African countries — but only once immunizati­on has been completed in China.

The World Health Organizati­on has previously said it hopes to secure 2 billion doses for people in lower-income countries by the end of 2021, including through initiative­s like Gavi’s.

 ?? Associated Press ?? ■ A volunteer receives a COVID-19 test vaccine injection at the Chris Hani Baragwanat­h hospital in Soweto, Johannesbu­rg, South Africa. The vaccine was developed at Oxford University in Britain. Politician­s and public health leaders have publicly committed to equitably sharing any coronaviru­s vaccine that works, but the top global initiative to make it happen may allow rich countries to reinforce their own stockpiles while making fewer doses available for poor ones.
Associated Press ■ A volunteer receives a COVID-19 test vaccine injection at the Chris Hani Baragwanat­h hospital in Soweto, Johannesbu­rg, South Africa. The vaccine was developed at Oxford University in Britain. Politician­s and public health leaders have publicly committed to equitably sharing any coronaviru­s vaccine that works, but the top global initiative to make it happen may allow rich countries to reinforce their own stockpiles while making fewer doses available for poor ones.

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