National Post (National Edition)

First COVAX vaccine shots arrive in Ghana

Program aims to narrow richpoor inoculatio­n gap

- CHRISTIAN AKORLIE

ACCRA• The World Health Organizati­on's global vaccine-sharing scheme COVAX delivered its first COVId-19 shots on Wednesday, as the race to inoculate the world's poorest people and tame the pandemic accelerate­s.

Almost a year after the WhO described the novel coronaviru­s as a global pandemic, a flight carrying 600,000 doses of the AstraZenec­a/Oxford vaccine produced by the Serum Institute of India landed in Ghana's capital of Accra.

Local representa­tives of the WhO and the united Nations children's agency uNICeF described the vaccine's arrival as a “momentous” step.

“In the days ahead, front-line workers will begin to receive vaccines, and the next phase in the fight against this disease can begin — the ramping up of the largest immunizati­on campaign in history,” said uNICeF executive director henrietta Fore.

The delivery comes eight months after the launch of the COVAX initiative, aimed at pooling funds from wealthier countries and non-profits to distribute vaccines equitably around the world.

The shots, part of an initial tranche for low- and middle-income countries, will be used by Ghana to start a vaccinatio­n drive from March 2 that will prioritize front-line health workers and others at high risk.

“The first segment of the population that will receive the 600,000 doses will be health workers, adults 60 years and over, people with underlying health conditions,” Ghana's government said on Wednesday.

Some senior government officials, teachers, security personnel and essential workers, in Accra and the country's second city Kumasi, will also be vaccinated.

Coronaviru­s infections have soared in Ghana to over 81,200, and 584 people have died, with nearly as many dying in the first two months of this year as in the whole of 2020, health ministry data showed.

“There are a lot of frontline workers who are self-isolating because they have been exposed and got infected,” emmanuel Addipa-Adapoe, a medical officer at the Greater Accra regional hospital, said. “receiving the vaccine will be like arming them for the task ahead.”

The rollout in Ghana is a milestone for COVAX, which is trying to narrow a politicall­y sensitive gap between the millions being vaccinated in wealthier countries and the comparativ­ely few who have received shots in less developed parts of the world.

It plans to deliver nearly 2 billion doses this year, including 1.8 billion to poorer countries at no cost to their government­s.

 ?? FrANCIS KOKOrOKO / reuTerS ?? Workers offload boxes of the AstraZenec­a/Oxford vaccine at the airport in Accra, Ghana, on Wednesday. The rollout in Ghana is part of the World Health Organizati­on's global vaccine-sharing scheme COVAX.
FrANCIS KOKOrOKO / reuTerS Workers offload boxes of the AstraZenec­a/Oxford vaccine at the airport in Accra, Ghana, on Wednesday. The rollout in Ghana is part of the World Health Organizati­on's global vaccine-sharing scheme COVAX.

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