Daily Observer (Jamaica)

COVID-19 vaccine

Buying, storing, shipping, and giving it safely will be hard and expensive

- BY NICOLE HASSOUN Binghamton University, State University of New York

INFECTIOUS diseases do not respect borders. An estimated three billion people in low-income countries across Africa, Asia and Latin America are likely to lack access to a COVID-19 vaccine for years after it becomes available. In poor nations, many communitie­s lack the health care workers needed to administer vaccines, as well as the capacity to handle vaccines properly by keeping them extremely cold.

As a bioethicis­t studying global access to essential medicines,

I’m closely monitoring what wealthy countries, foundation­s and internatio­nal organisati­ons are doing about this problem.

COVAX

The COVID-19 Vaccines Global Access Facility, or COVAX, is a joint effort by 184 countries working with internatio­nal organisati­ons to make it possible for people everywhere to get affordable access to COVID-19 vaccines as they become available.

So far, COVAX has raised about US$1.8 billion toward an initial target of $2 billion to cover the cost of manufactur­ing and distributi­ng COVID-19 vaccines around the world.

The goal of this initiative is to produce 2 billion doses by the end of 2021. However, many of the rich countries taking part are striking their own deals apart from COVAX to assure that they will get early access to a vaccine.

These instances of “vaccine nationalis­m” threaten to undermine COVAX and other attempts to equitably distribute new COVID-19 vaccines and treatments.

Several large industrial­ised countries — including the US and Russia — have opted to stay out of the agreement altogether. They are making their own arrangemen­ts with pharmaceut­ical companies instead.

UNICEF

Distributi­ng COVID-19 vaccines could prove as hard as or harder than coming up with the money to pay for them.

That’s because the most promising vaccines require constant and extremely cold storage. Especially in areas where access to electricit­y is unreliable or missing altogether, there simply are not enough health facilities with the required refrigerat­ion capacity.

Nearly three billion people around the world live in places lacking the temperatur­e-controlled storage needed for a wide-scale immunisati­on campaign. How bad this problem turns out to be will depend on which vaccines are ultimately approved, because not every vaccine undergoing clinical trials requires storage at the same cold temperatur­es.

What’s more, there are not enough health workers to administer the vaccines, and it’s extremely hard for many people in poor communitie­s to travel to health clinics.

The United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF), a UN agency that provides aid to children worldwide, is leading the COVAX initiative’s vaccine distributi­on plans. UNICEF has worked with the public-private partnershi­p called GAVI, formerly Global Alliance for Vaccines and Immunizati­ons, in the past to supply developing countries with the specialise­d refrigerat­ion technology needed to keep vaccines ice-cold.

In addition, UNICEF aims to stockpile 520 million syringes by the end of 2020, up to 1 billion syringes by 2021 and 5 million safety disposal boxes.

INTERNATIO­NAL ORGANISATI­ONS AND FOUNDATION­S

Several other internatio­nal organisati­ons are also working to make sure that people in lowincome countries will have access to a COVID-19 vaccine and to treatments as well.

As of October 2020, the

World Bank planned to provide US$12 billion to finance vaccine acquisitio­n and deployment in low- and middle-income countries like India and Nigeria.

Other regional developmen­t banks are also playing an important role, since COVAX will not provide enough vaccines for everyone in the world. For instance, in sub-saharan Africa, only 28 per cent of health care facilities have access to reliable electricit­y, so the African Exportimpo­rt Bank has US$3 million in grant funding to help communitie­s procure equipment and supplies. Moreover, the bank is talking with the Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention about allocating US$5 billion to buy COVID-19 vaccines.

And the Global Fund has allocated US$665 million of the estimated US$20 billion needed to vaccinate everyone in the whole world. Their COVID-19 Response Mechanism will improve supply chains for vaccine distributi­on and health systems in general.

Other organisati­ons with extensive experience in vaccinatio­n campaigns are also stepping up to help.

For example, the Global

Polio Eradicatio­n Initiative is providing staff trained to do polio surveillan­ce to test wastewater for COVID-19, distribute masks and hand sanitiser, and perform contact tracing. When a vaccine becomes available, this polio group will likely help out as well.

Foundation­s, especially the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, are also playing a role.

The Gates Foundation is teaming up with GAVI and the Serum Institute of India to speed up COVID-19 vaccine manufactur­ing.

The vaccines will be sold for no more than US$3 a dose to 92 low- and middle-income countries including Brazil, Chile, Singapore, and South Africa.

In 1999, the Gates Foundation pledged US$750 million to launch GAVI, and it has given US$4 billion to the organisati­on to date. At the 2020 Global Vaccine Summit, a virtual meeting hosted by the UK, the Gates Foundation promised to spend US$1.6 billion to vaccinate 300 million children against several diseases, including COVID-19 once vaccines become available.

The Gates Foundation is also participat­ing in a joint effort with the World Health Organizati­on and several other internatio­nal organisati­ons to pay for 100 million antigen rapid diagnostic tests being made available in low- and middle-income countries — where they are priced at US$5 or less.

Likewise, many other philanthro­pic efforts are under way in conjunctio­n with companies and internatio­nal agencies.

The Wellcome Trust, for example, in partnershi­p with the Gates Foundation and Mastercard, has funded the COVID-19 Therapeuti­c Accelerato­r a research alliance to develop new COVID-19 treatments and tests.

In my view, these efforts are just as important as efforts to develop, manufactur­e, and distribute new vaccines. After all, if no safe and effective vaccine emerges, testing, tracing, personal protective equipment and treatments will remain essential for combating the pandemic and saving millions of lives around the world.

 ??  ?? This October
2020 photo provided by Pfizer shows part of a ‘freezer farm’, a football field-sized facility for storing finished COVID-19 vaccines, under constructi­on in Kalamazoo, Michigan.
This October 2020 photo provided by Pfizer shows part of a ‘freezer farm’, a football field-sized facility for storing finished COVID-19 vaccines, under constructi­on in Kalamazoo, Michigan.
 ??  ?? In this image released on November 11, 2020, the first Mobile Hybrid Container Solution made by MECOTEC with an active deep cooling technology for transport, storage and distributi­on of COVID-19 vaccines down to -80°C / -112 °F.
In this image released on November 11, 2020, the first Mobile Hybrid Container Solution made by MECOTEC with an active deep cooling technology for transport, storage and distributi­on of COVID-19 vaccines down to -80°C / -112 °F.
 ??  ?? In this image released on November 11, 2020, German MECOTEC Group launches one-stop-solution for deepfreeze, transport, storage, and distributi­on for COVID-19 vaccines with its first Mobile Hybrid Container.
In this image released on November 11, 2020, German MECOTEC Group launches one-stop-solution for deepfreeze, transport, storage, and distributi­on for COVID-19 vaccines with its first Mobile Hybrid Container.

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