The Reporter (Vacaville)

World Bank approves $12B to finance virus vaccines, care

- The Associated Press

The World Bank has approved $12 billion in financing to help developing countries buy and distribute coronaviru­s vaccines, tests, and treatments, aiming to support the vaccinatio­n of up to 1 billion people.

The $12 billion “envelope” is part of a wider World Bank Group package of up to $160 billion to help developing countries fight the COVID-19 pandemic, the bank said in a statement late Tuesday.

The World Bank said its COVID-19 emergency response programs are already reaching 111 countries.

Citizens in developing countries also need access to safe and effective COVID-19 vaccines, it said.

“We are extending and expanding our fast-track approach to address the COVID emergency so that developing countries have fair and equal access to vaccines,” said the bank’s president, David Malpass, said in

the statement.

“Access to safe and effective vaccines and strengthen­ed delivery systems is key to alter the course of the pandemic and help countries experienci­ng catastroph­ic economic and fiscal impacts move toward a resilient recovery,” he said.

The Internatio­nal Finance Corporatio­n, the private sector lending arm of the World Bank is investing in vaccine manufactur­ers through a $4 billion Global Health Platform, the World Bank said.

Researcher­s are working on developing more than 170 potential COVID-19 vaccines.

Developmen­t and deployment of such preventive vaccines is crucial to helping stem outbreaks of the coronaviru­s that has killed more than 1 million people and sickened more than 38 million, while devastatin­g economies and leaving many millions jobless.

The world’s richest countries have locked up most of the world’s potential vaccine supply through 2021, raising worries that poor and vulnerable communitie­s will not be able to get the shots. Meanwhile, an ambitious internatio­nal project to deliver coronaviru­s vaccines to the world’s poorest people, called Covax, is facing potential shortages of money, cargo planes, refrigerat­ion and vaccines themselves.

The World Bank said it will draw on expertise and experience from its involvemen­t in many large- scale immunizati­on programs and other public health efforts.

T he funding also is meant to help countries access tests and treatments and to support management of supply chains and other logistics for vaccinatio­ns in developing countries, the bank said.

 ?? EMRAH GUREL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? On Oct. 9, a health worker, right, administer­s the first dose of a COVID-19 vaccine currently on phase III clinical trials to Cem Gun, an emergency medicine physician at the Acibadem Hospital in Istanbul.
EMRAH GUREL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE On Oct. 9, a health worker, right, administer­s the first dose of a COVID-19 vaccine currently on phase III clinical trials to Cem Gun, an emergency medicine physician at the Acibadem Hospital in Istanbul.

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