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New Variants Show Why the World Urgently Needs Vaccine Equity

- Prashant Yadav

DELIVERING MORE VAC CINES to lowand middleinco­me countries is vital if we want to limit the emergence of new coronaviru­s variants.

With lockdowns targeting the unvaccinat­ed taking place across parts of Europe, there has been much debate about the levels of vaccine uptake in certain wealthier nations. However, this only serves to deflect from a much more critical issue, namely the staggering imbalance between vaccinatio­n levels in wealthy countries and those in lower income nations. This imbalance has been highlighte­d by the emergence of the new Covid-19 virus variant, Omicron. It is a sombre reminder that we need to expedite efforts to protect population­s everywhere and that inward looking strategies will not work.

Glacial progress on global vaccinatio­ns

In a recent paper published in PLOS Medicine my co-authors and I laid out some key priority actions and initiative­s for achieving global equity for Covid-19 vaccines.

The estimates in the paper showed that as of June just 0.9 percent of those living in Low Income Countries (LIC) and under 10 percent in Low and Middle Income Countries (LMIC) had received one dose of a Covid-19 vaccine. This is in sharp contrast to the 43 percent figure in High Income Countries (HIC). More recent estimates (as of 25th Nov) reveal little progress in addressing this yawning gap, with only 3 percent of people in low income countries having been fully vaccinated compared to 67.2 percent in high income countries.

We need to rethink this current imbalance as a matter of urgency, for the simple reason that it puts the whole world in peril. Low levels of vaccinatio­n in LMICs increase the risk of major outbreaks taking place in specific regions, especially across Africa, Latin America and Central Asia, where underfunde­d health services may struggle to cope and high mortality levels could be expected.

The science is also clear that the continued presence of large unvaccinat­ed population­s around the world greatly increases the opportunit­ies for vaccine-resistant variants to develop, as we have seen in the case of Omicron. This threatens to erode the effectiven­ess of existing vaccines and lead to new waves of infections. It may also undermine current trust in vaccines as a viable solution to tackling the pandemic.

This is a truly global crisis, and we need to treat it as such. The simple reality is if we can get everyone vaccinated as quickly as possible, regardless of nationalit­y or income, then we can reduce the risk of further new variants emerging. This will then allow us to focus on creating long term strategies to manage Covid-19 as an endemic virus.

Adjusting our priorities

In the short term, the simplest way of addressing the current imbalance is to move the low and lower middle income countries with very limited coverage rates to the front of the queue of vaccine orders. Vaccine manufactur­ers have shown a willingnes­s to change the order priority, but very few high income countries have agreed to give up their spot.

This proposal is not asking that wealthier countries forego their outstandin­g orders and risk having insufficie­nt doses to vaccinate their own population­s. It is just asking that when they do have sufficient coverage and surplus doses (which many already do have), that they don’t simply hang onto these vaccines as a reserve but help manufactur­ers prioritise delivery of vaccines to the LMICs.

This June, the G7 countries announced they would donate one billion vaccines to poorer nations. While this is a welcome step, there has been insufficie­nt progress so far on actually delivering the pledged doses. In addition, the reality is that this is just a fraction of the 11 billion vaccines that the World Health Organizati­on estimate are needed to ensure proper control of the pandemic. And as the prospect for more variant-matched vaccines increases, we may need even more.

It is therefore critically important that we find ways to ramp up vaccine manufactur­ing and distributi­on capacities to match global demand. This doesn’t just mean producing more vaccines, but also ensuring that different countries or regions have the capability to make their own.

Increasing manufactur­ing capacity

There have been many calls to force large pharmaceut­ical companies to give up their valuable patents, but patents are often not the bottleneck in expanding manufactur­ing capacity. Instead, it is a shortage of highly qualified biologics manufactur­ing specialist­s, equipment and labs. The fastest pathway to increased production capacity is for high income countries to facilitate the transfer of technology and help overcome staff and equipment deficits. This will enable more manufactur­ers to produce vaccines under licence from pharmaceut­ical companies.

Meanwhile news that big pharmaceut­ical firms are looking at developing such manufactur­ing partnershi­ps in African countries such as South Africa, Senegal and Rwanda are to be applauded. But we shouldn’t underestim­ate the challenges involved and the time needed to get such new plants up and running.

Aside from the practical aspects of sourcing the equipment and workforces required to build and operate these facilities, it is vital that the right scientific and regulatory frameworks are in place to guarantee the developmen­t of safe and effective vaccines. There is also the secondary question of what happens to these facilities once the demand for Covid-19 vaccines eventually recedes. Flexibilit­y in production capacity can make the plants more robust to uncertaint­y in demand and more successful in delivering different types of vaccine platforms.

Making this happen is clearly a major undertakin­g, one that will take time and require funding and coordinati­on at an internatio­nal level. There has to be a global commitment from all stakeholde­rs involved, a commitment that goes beyond geographic­al boundaries and individual interests.

Tackling vaccinatio­n hesitancy

While addressing manufactur­ing and order queue swapping challenges is by no means easy, there are at least clear paths forward that the global community is beginning to take. This is also the case for the challenges around cold chain logistics, with many steps being taken to install new fridges and freezers in countries that lack adequate infrastruc­ture. There is, however, one additional obstacle to tackle: ensuring significan­t vaccine uptake within each LMIC when doses do become available. The reality is we have all been living in the shadow of the disease for nearly two years, so the sense of immediate threat has begun to wane. In some countries, a common narrative that there is now less risk from Covid-19, borne out by the low or zero prevalence of infections in an individual’s immediate social circle, means a less obvious need to get vaccinated—regardless of people’s views on vaccinatio­ns in general.

While vaccinatio­n misinforma­tion and concerns about side effects are present in LMICs, the percentage of sceptics and antivaxxer­s is lower than many high income countries. The bigger challenge is to convince more than half of the population in some countries who have no issues with vaccines per se, but who feel the threat from the virus is exaggerate­d and so question the urgent need to get vaccinated against Covid-19.

Because it can be impacted by local cultural and social beliefs, vaccine hesitancy is a problem that has to be addressed on a country or even local district level. It is often a function of a complex web of relationsh­ips among the public and government, civil society and religious authoritie­s. LMIC government­s need to figure out how to tackle it within their own population and understand what kinds of local interventi­ons and incentives are necessary to persuade the majority to get vaccinated.

Internatio­nal collaborat­ion can definitely help, not least through identifyin­g and sharing success stories. Organisati­ons like Exemplars in Global Health, run by Gates Ventures, are already conducting research and collating global examples of best practices where countries or districts have managed to reach high vaccinatio­n levels.

At a recent event Exemplars hosted to discuss best practices in Indian districts that have achieved over 90 percent vaccinatio­n rates, local officials highlighte­d the importance of empathy. In other words, meeting the communitie­s on their terms, using their languages, following their customs, and addressing their fears. They also cited sheer persistenc­e and ingenuity as essential to their success.

Understand­ing how a district in India achieved 100 per cent vaccinatio­n rates can be incredibly useful, but how to share this solution with a health adviser in a district of Ghana? And how to do it in a way that makes sense for the local situation? When to use mass vaccinatio­n sites at festivals and celebratio­n venues and when to conduct targeted at-home/community outreach?

Answering these questions calls for global collaborat­ion to ensure that different ideas are shared and discussed across different regions. Translatin­g these exemplars into actionable plans requires funding and a global consensus on how to develop vaccine delivery strategies and infrastruc­ture that include the right behavioura­l and motivation­al nudges.

The statistics are stark evidence that we have failed to find fair and equitable solutions to tackle the challenges presented by Covid-19 to date. Yet the inequity is not something that we can choose to ignore. If we cannot urgently address vaccine inequity, we will all continue to face the gloomy risk of a prolonged pandemic, with recurring scares around new variants, and constant fluctuatio­ns between the opening and closing of our schools, offices, restaurant­s, borders and economies.

Prashant Yadav is an Affiliate Professor of Technology and Operations Management at INSEAD and the Academic Director of the INSEAD Africa Initiative. His work focuses on improving healthcare supply chains and designing better supply chains for products with social benefits.

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