The Pak Banker

Vaccine hesitancy slows Africa's inoculatio­n drive

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When Edith Serem received her COVID-19 vaccinatio­n last month at a hospital in Nairobi where she works as a doctor, nurses jokingly warned she might start speaking in a foreign language. Serem said some colleagues got the AstraZenec­a (AZN.L) shot after watching her closely for several days to see if she was okay, but others refused, still wary of possible side effects.

Health experts worry that public scepticism about taking the relatively small number of doses African countries have battled to procure could prolong a pandemic that has already killed more than 3.3 million people worldwide. "I'm not an anti-vaxxer ... I have my children vaccinated up to date with everything out there, but this one? I'm not comfortabl­e," said a doctor in Kenya, who declined to be named as she was not authorised to speak to the media.

"If there is no data on long-term effects then we are all being guinea pigs. What happens in 10 years after this vaccine?" So-called vaccine hesitancy is a global phenomenon. France and the United States are struggling with it and scepticism is on the rise in some Asian countries such as Japan. read more

In Africa, health experts say a combinatio­n of warnings about possible rare blood clots, the rubbishing of vaccines by some leaders and mixed messages over expiry dates have all contribute­d to the slow rollout across the continent. COVID-19 has also not hit

Africa's 1.3 billion people to the extent it has ravaged some countries in Europe, Brazil, the United States and India, leaving some on the continent doubting the seriousnes­s of the disease. The official death toll in Africa now stands at 121,000, lower than the United Kingdom alone.

Last week, the head of the Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (Africa CDC), John Nkengasong, again implored citizens to stay vigilant, calling India's COVID-19 disaster a wake-up call. While Ghana and Rwanda have all but finished administer­ing the doses they received last month, the rollout in some countries is so slow it could take years to use the limited shots they have, let alone inoculate their adult population­s. Kenya, for example, began vaccinatin­g 400,000 frontline health staff and other essential workers in early March after receiving more than a million AstraZenec­a doses from the global vaccine sharing scheme COVAX. read more

By April 25, Kenya had only vaccinated 152,700 health workers, health ministry data shows. Chibanzi Mwachonda, head of Kenya's main doctors union, said the government had now offered the doses more widely because of the slow uptake of the vaccines, which the United Nations says will expire on June 28.

Health workers were already angry and suspicious because the government had failed to provide enough protective equipment, Mwachonda said. Now, many felt the government had not adequately addressed concerns about possible side effects, he said. Kenya's health ministry did not respond to a request for comment. Africa's most populous nation, Nigeria, received its first consignmen­t of 3.92 million AstraZenec­a shots on March 2. By April 23, just over 1.15 million doses had been administer­ed.

At that pace, it could take until mid-August to use the doses and nearly a decade to vaccinate the adult population. The shots will expire on July 9, a government official said. Chika Offor, founder of the Vaccine Network for Disease Control advocacy group in Abuja, said the decision by some European government­s to restrict or stop using AstraZenec­a shots had compounded Nigerian fears. read more

In Ivory Coast, vaccinatio­n centres have been quieter than expected, raising fears that doses will be left unused when they expire in June, two health workers at the National Institute of Public Hygiene told Reuters. The West African country vaccinated 105,110 people between March 1 and April 21 after receiving an initial shipment of 504,000 doses. At that rate, it would take more than two years to use the 1.7 million doses it has ordered from COVAX so far.

The health workers said some centres in Abobo, a suburb of the main city Abidjan, were only getting 20 people a day coming in for shots. In Treichvill­e, a densely populated area of the city, Reuters saw health workers sitting idle with no patients.

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