Daily Observer (Jamaica)

Internatio­nal COVAX vaccine delay

Un-backed delivery programme warns of major setback

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GENEVA Switzerlan­d (AP) — The Un-backed programme to ship COVID-19 vaccines worldwide has announced supply delays involving a key Indian manufactur­er, a major setback for the ambitious roll-out aimed at helping low- and middle-income countries vaccinate their population­s and fight the pandemic.

Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance, and its partners said yesterday that the Serum Institute of India, a pivotal vaccine maker behind the COVAX programme, will face increasing domestic demands as coronaviru­s infections surge.

“Delays in securing supplies of Sii-produced COVID-19 vaccine doses are due to the increased demand for COVID-19 vaccines in India,” Gavi said.

The move will affect up to 40 million doses of the Oxford University-astrazenec­a vaccines being manufactur­ed by the Serum Institute that were to be delivered for COVAX this month, as well as 50 million expected next month.

COVAX, an initiative devised to give countries access to coronaviru­s vaccines regardless of their wealth, has so far shipped vaccines to some 50 countries and territorie­s.

The Serum Institute of Indian has been contracted to supply vaccines to 64 countries, and Gavi said the Un.-backed programme has “notified all affected economies of potential delays”.

Gavi said the Serum Institute has pledged that “alongside supplying India, it will prioritise the COVAX multilater­al solution for equitable distributi­on.”

Gavi, which runs COVAX jointly with the World Health Organizati­on and the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedne­ss Innovation­s, has distribute­d 31 million doses of the Astrazenec­a vaccine – 28 million from the Serum Institute and another three million from a South Korean contractor also producing it.

The programme had been aiming to deliver some 237 million Astrazenec­a vaccines through the end of May. A Gavi spokesman said the delays were not expected to affect the overall goal of shipping some two billion doses worldwide through COVAX by the end of the year.

UN officials, government­s, advocacy groups and others in recent months have pleaded with manufactur­ers to do more to speed up and broaden production of COVID-19 vaccines and ensure fair distributi­on — insisting that the pandemic can only be defeated if everyone is safe from it.

The Serum Institute of India, also known as SII, is the world’s largest maker of vaccines. Unlike many other manufactur­ers, it pledged to prioritise making shots for COVAX.

India’s foreign minister, S Jaishankar, tweeted a photograph yesterday afternoon of vaccines received by South Sudan, although there have been growing concerns that vaccine exports from India have dwindled in the past week.

India has consistent­ly maintained that it would try to export vaccines to as many countries as possible, but with the caveat that supplies would based on availabili­ty and the requiremen­ts of India’s own immunizati­on programme.

India’s need for vaccines is set to increase significan­tly beginning April 1, when it plans to start vaccinatin­g everyone over 45, age groups that account for 88 per cent of all virus-related deaths in India.

The expanded vaccinatio­ns coincide with a sharp spike in COVID-19 infections and concerns about more contagious variants circulatin­g in the country. India reported over 50,000 new confirmed cases on Thursday, the highest daily number so far this year,.

 ?? (Photos: AP) ?? A vial of the Astrazenec­a COVID-19 vaccine, manufactur­ed by the Serum Institute of India and provided through the global COVAX initiative, is removed from a portable cold storage box in preparatio­n for a vaccinatio­n, in Machakos, Kenya, March 24, 2021.
(Photos: AP) A vial of the Astrazenec­a COVID-19 vaccine, manufactur­ed by the Serum Institute of India and provided through the global COVAX initiative, is removed from a portable cold storage box in preparatio­n for a vaccinatio­n, in Machakos, Kenya, March 24, 2021.
 ??  ?? A police officer has his blood pressure taken before receiving a shot of the Astrazenec­a COVID-19 vaccine, manufactur­ed by the Serum Institute of India and provided through the global COVAX initiative, in Machakos, Kenya, Wednesday.
A police officer has his blood pressure taken before receiving a shot of the Astrazenec­a COVID-19 vaccine, manufactur­ed by the Serum Institute of India and provided through the global COVAX initiative, in Machakos, Kenya, Wednesday.

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