The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Africa in a bind on vaccine deliveries: CDC

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NAIROBI. – Many people in African countries who have received their first shot of a Covid-19 vaccine do not know when they will get the second one due to delivery delays, according to the continent’s top public health official.

“We cannot predict when the second doses will come and that is not good for our vaccinatio­n programme,” John Nkengasong, the head of the Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (Africa CDC), told reporters yesterday. Africa lags behind most other regions in Covid-19 vaccinatio­ns, with just under 14 million doses of mostly AstraZenec­a vaccines having been administer­ed on the continent of 1.3 billion.

On the contrary, Zimbabwe has so far administer­ed 223 000 doses have been given with 28 797 people having been fully vaccinated since the programme started in February.

President Mnangagwa has hailed Zimbabwe’s ongoing Covid- 19 vaccinatio­n programme, which is progressin­g well with the country having the eighth highest vaccinatio­n rate in Africa and third in the Southern Africa region.

Most of the reported side effects have been slight to moderate, the WHO’s African Region said in a statement, adding that no cases of blood clotting problems have been reported, touching on a particular concern about AstraZenec­a vaccines.

So far, the majority of the vaccines available in African countries have been delivered via COVAX, a World Health Organizati­on-backed (WHO) scheme designed to boost the distributi­on of vaccines to low-income nations.

COVAX aims to deliver 600 million shots to about 40 African countries this year, enough to vaccinate 20 percent of their population­s.

The majority of those doses are AstraZenec­a shots produced by the Serum Institute of India (SII). But last month, India suspended its exports to meet rising domestic demand following a surge in COVID19 cases.

Nkengasong had warned at the time that India’s move would undermine the continent’s inoculatio­n plans and could have a “catastroph­ic” impact if extended.

“If you finish vaccinatin­g your people before Africa or other parts of the world, you have not done yourself any justice because variants will emerge and undermine your own vaccinatio­n efforts,” he said. – Al Jazeera

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