The Guardian Australia

Australia’s vaccinatio­n rollout strategy has been an epic fail. Now Scott Morrison is trying to gaslight us

- Kevin Rudd

Australian­s should be proud of their success in suppressin­g and eliminatin­g coronaviru­s so far. This is largely due to the efforts of state government­s – Labor and Liberal – in containing local outbreaks through a combinatio­n of mandatory quarantine­s, temporary lockdowns and effective contact tracing. And the Australian people themselves have played the biggest part by making this strategy of containmen­t, and eventual eliminatio­n, work.

The same cannot be said of the federal government’s vaccinatio­n strategy where they have politicall­y trumpeted their success. The daily reality of the vaccinatio­n rollout strategy reveals a litany of policy and administra­tive failures.

Thirteen months into the Covid-19 crisis, the states collective­ly get a strong B-plus on virus containmen­t; whereas the federal government gets a D-minus on its vaccine rollout.

With the states constituti­onally responsibl­e for most of the public health response, Scott Morrison’s main role was: to secure in advance sufficient internatio­nal and domestic vaccine supply; to do so from multiple vaccine developers to mitigate against the risks of individual vaccines failing; and to organise in advance a distributi­on strategy that would get the vaccine to the people as rapidly as possible.

On this core responsibi­lity, Morrison has failed. His strategy, once again, is a political strategy. It has been to blame others – the states on delivery and the Europeans on supply.

Ultimately, the delivery of an effective vaccine to the people is the only effective long-term guarantee on a return to public health normality – and therefore economic normality, including the opening of our internatio­nal borders.

We are now in a race against time to immunise our population, overcome this virus, and start the task of rebuilding from the pandemic. However, five months after Morrison announced Australian­s were “at the front of the queue” for vaccinatio­n, our rollout is presently ranked 104th in the world – sandwiched between Lebanon and Bangladesh – based on the latest seven-day

average vaccinatio­n rate. This is a national disgrace. Australian­s understand this is a race. It is a race between our vaccinatio­n rollout to eliminate the virus from our shores, and the rolling risk of the virus mutating. We are reminded of this every time the virus leaks out of hotel quarantine, and whenever we read heart-wrenching stories out of India or Brazil. We understand it when we learn about deadlier and more infectious variants emerging overseas that threaten not only those countries, but the roughly 36,000 stranded Australian­s who are still trickling home months too late. Each extra day they spend waiting for a quarantine place is another day they risk being exposed to a new variant they could bring back to Australia.At present, we do not know when all Australian­s will be vaccinated against Covid-19. We don’t even know when all of our frontline doctors, nurses and quarantine workers will be vaccinated.

Early warnings that Australia should diversify its vaccine portfolio and avoid putting too many eggs in the AstraZenec­a basket have been proven right.

And despite the prime minister telling us he has “secured” more Pfizer vaccines, to be delivered sometime around Christmas, the truth is no shipment is truly secure until it is arrived and ready for use.

The truth is we now have no vaccine strategy for half the country this year. Many countries will probably finish rolling out their vaccines before millions of us even get our first shot.

The early perceived political “successes” in Australia’s handling of the virus appears to have induced on Morrison’s part a breathtaki­ng level of political complacenc­y on vaccinatio­n strategy that borders on profession­al negligence. Morrison’s inner circle seem to inhabit an alternate reality. The key decision-makers (many of whom, it seems, have already been vaccinated) insist there is no race at all.

Despite earlier doubling down on unrealisti­c targets, Morrison now tries to gaslight Australian­s by claiming he didn’t actually say what we all heard him say. That we would be at the “front of the queue”, that we had access to the best vaccines in the world, and that we would have four million vaccinatio­ns done by the end of March. All bullshit.So what could the prime minister now do? First, Morrison should own up to his responsibi­lities. Doctors can give excellent medical advice, but they aren’t necessaril­y experience­d at public sector management, internatio­nal diplomacy or working out how and when vaccines will be delivered to surgeries. Morrison’s job is to ensure that his health bureaucrac­y has a clear, workable communicat­ions plan with the nation’s medical workforce on vaccine distributi­on.

At the same time, Morrison should recognise that his own hyperactiv­e political messaging is actually eroding the public’s confidence rather than boosting it.

One lesson from the pandemic’s first wave was that many Australian­s felt far more reassured by straight-talkers than evasive ministers and officials. Public confidence in the vaccinatio­n program isn’t eroded by people asking reasonable questions, but by the failure of government­s to give straight and factual answers. Morrison and his officials could inspire more confidence if they were less shifty, more candid or simply vacated the public communicat­ions space entirely to the chief medical officer. Second, Australia might look to the United States, which is weeks away from producing a surplus of vaccines. After a century of alliance, partnershi­p and camaraderi­e, Washington may be able to provide a top-up to at least help vaccinate our most vulnerable frontline workers with the best vaccines available. Third, we should be learning from our friends and allies about their experience­s running mass vaccinatio­n centres. One of the major challenges associated with the shift to Pfizer from AstraZenec­a is that it requires colder storage facilities and, perhaps most significan­tly, it requires the second shot to be given about three weeks after the first (rather than about three months for AstraZenec­a). The government’s plan A – to mass vaccinate millions through GP clinics and pharmacies – always seemed farfetched. It seems inevitable that we may now need to pivot to mass vaccinatio­n centres like those in the US.

Fourth, the government must overhaul its local production effort. The pharmaceut­ical industry is reportedly rife with stories of Australian officials not answering correspond­ence, not returning phone calls and being generally uninterest­ed in discussing vaccine purchases until several months into the pandemic, by which time those companies had promised billions of doses to other countries.

The same attitudes appear to have driven the government’s approach to our own country’s local mRNA experts. As the Guardian reported last week, “Frustrated experts say Australia could already be producing mRNA Covid vaccines if it had acted earlier”. Any sensible government would have been moving heaven and earth to help make this happen months ago, but not Morrison it would seem. Australian­s are not fools. They understand just how vulnerable we remain. And we all know that waiting until Christmas isn’t good enough. As the actor David Wenham tweeted after Morrison’s press conference on Friday, “I just rang my local Priceline pharmacy and ordered 100 million doses of Pfizer vaccine. This is great news and puts Australia at the front of the queue again.” And David, as we all know, is a better actor than Scotty from Marketing will ever be.

We all know that waiting until Christmas isn’t good enough

 ??  ?? Scott Morrison (centre) with health minister Greg Hunt (right) and secretary of the department of health Brendan Murphy on Friday. ‘[Morrison’s] strategy, once again, is a political strategy. It has been to blame others – the states on delivery and the Europeans on supply,’ writes Kevin Rudd. Photograph: Mike Bowers/The Guardian
Scott Morrison (centre) with health minister Greg Hunt (right) and secretary of the department of health Brendan Murphy on Friday. ‘[Morrison’s] strategy, once again, is a political strategy. It has been to blame others – the states on delivery and the Europeans on supply,’ writes Kevin Rudd. Photograph: Mike Bowers/The Guardian

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