The Asian Age

AstraZenec­a vax gets WHO nod

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Toronto, Feb. 16: The World Health Organisati­on has granted an emergency authorisat­ion to AstraZenec­a's Coronaviru­s vaccine, a move that should allow the UN agency's partners to ship millions of doses to countries as part of a UN-backed programme to tame the pandemic.

In a statement Monday, the WHO said it was clearing the AstraZenec­a vaccines made by the Serum Institute of India and South Korea's AstraZenec­a-SKBio. The WHO's green light for the AstraZenec­a vaccine is only the second one the UN health agency has issued after authorizin­g the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine in December.

Monday's announceme­nt should trigger the delivery of hundreds of millions of doses to countries that have signed up for the UN-backed COVAX effort, which aims to deliver vaccines to the world's most vulnerable people. “Countries with no access to vaccines to date will finally be able to start vaccinatin­g their health workers and population­s at risk,” said Dr. Mariangela Simao, the WHO's Assistant-Director General for Access to Medicines and Health Products.

The Coronaviru­s has infected more than 109 million people and killed at least 2.4 million of them. But many countries have not yet started vaccinatio­n programmes and even rich nations are facing shortages of vaccine doses as manufactur­ers struggle to ramp up production. The AstraZenec­a vaccine has already been authorised in more than 50 countries, including Britain, India, Argentina and Mexico. It is cheaper and easier to handle than the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine, which needs deep-cold storage that is not widespread in many developing nations.

Both vaccines require two shots per person, given weeks apart. Last week, WHO vaccine experts recommende­d the use of the AstraZenec­a vaccine for people over age 18, including in countries that have detected variants of Covid-19.

But that was contrary to the recommenda­tion from the African Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which said countries that had identified a virus variant first seen in South Africa should be “cautious” in their use of the AstraZenec­a vaccine, suggesting that other shots be prioritise­d instead.

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