Philippine Daily Inquirer

MODERNA VACCINES COMING IN JUNE; FIL-AMS LOBBY BIDEN FOR JABS

- By Miguel R. Camus and Maricar Cinco @Team_Inquirer

Billionair­e Enrique Razon said COVID-19 vaccines from American drug company Moderna would be arriving in June this year, raising hopes of speeding up the country’s inoculatio­n drive against the pandemic that recently triggered another round of lockdowns in Metro Manila and nearby provinces.

The ports and gaming tycoon heads the private sector group involved in the tripartite agreement to secure 20 million doses of the Moderna vaccine.

“When deliveries arrive at the end of the second quarter [of 2021], we shall immediatel­y roll out our vaccinatio­n program for employees, their direct dependents and extended household members,” Razon, chair and president of Internatio­nal Container Terminal Services Inc. (ICTSI), said at his company’s annual shareholde­rs’ meeting on Thursday.

Razon called the shipment the largest combined national government, local government and private sector order for vaccines.

Under the tripartite agreement, the government will receive 13 million doses of the Moderna vaccine while the private sector will get 7 million doses for its workers.

But according to the country’s ambassador to the United States, Jose Manuel Romualdez, the US decision to temporaril­y halt the use of Johnson & Johnson’s COVID-19 vaccine could set back the delivery of the Moderna shots to the Philippine­s.

“(U)nfortunate­ly, because of the recent setback of the J&J vaccines, this (delivery) may be delayed again. We were just informed. We’re working, trying to get some of these vaccines earlier, like at the end of May, but it seems it might be a little difficult [to do that] at this time,” Romualdez said in an online forum with US-based Filipinos on Thursday.

Still, Moderna, which produces one of the vaccines that is mainly used

in the United States, assured the Philippine­s that the scheduled delivery date of June 15 remains, Romualdez said.

The US recently halted the use of the one-shot J&J vaccine to investigat­e rare blood clot formations in six out of 7 million people inoculated.

Because of the suspension, Romualdez said, Moderna would have to “fill up” whatever gap the J&J vaccines might leave in the US stockpile over the next two weeks.

An export “ban” on American-made vaccines and Biden’s program to have 400 million vaccines in its domestic stockpile by May were preventing an early release of the vaccines to the Philippine­s.

Appeal to Biden

A Philippine official and the Filipino American healthcare community had been lobbying US President Joe Biden to release, for “humanitari­an reason,” as early as May the 20 million Moderna vaccines purchased by the government and the private sector.

Filipino American groups, like the US Medicare in the Philippine­s and the Philippine Medical Associatio­n of Metro Washington DC, have started a letter campaign to generate support for their “homeland,” as Metro Manila tackles a fresh wave of infections.

Filipinos, many of them health-care workers, are a “potent force” in the United States and may give the Philippine­s “an edge over many other countries that are also asking [the US] for the same thing,” Romualdez said.

The Philippine­s looks to the United States for about 70 million doses, or close to half of its 130-140 million vaccine requiremen­t, to inoculate 70 million Filipinos, Romualdez said.

Filipino American groups, like the US Medicare in the Philippine­s and the Philippine Medical Associatio­n of Metro Washington DC, have started a letter campaign to generate support for their ‘homeland,’ as Metro Manila tackles a fresh wave of infections

‘Borrowing’ AstraZenec­a

Aside from Moderna, Romualdez said, the Philippine­s had written the US Department of Health and Human Services and the White House for a request “to borrow” its excess AstraZenec­a vaccine.

He did not say how many doses were being sought but the United States recently donated 2 million doses each to Mexico and Canada. AstraZenec­a has not yet been approved for emergency use in the US.

Romualdez said the Philippine­s had also renegotiat­ed with Pfizer for 20 million doses through a bilateral deal and another 20 million through the COVAX facility, since it had settled the issue regarding the indemnity laws required by the American drug company.

“Right behind” the country’s order for Moderna jabs would be booster shots to be made available in the country, “as soon as the [Food and Drug Administra­tion] approves (the booster),” he added.

An initial 2.4 million Pfizer doses are expected in May through COVAX, he said, “but it’s the same problem. (Pfizer) cannot give us any specific date of delivery because of the requiremen­t that they need to supply first to the United States before they supply other countries.”

PH offers to host hubs

With still no end in sight for the pandemic, the Philippine­s had also offered to host the production or distributi­on hubs of US vaccine makers.

“We’ve offered it to Moderna, for instance, to set up [or] to start a distributi­on point in Clark (Freeport), where, as you know, it’s been developed as a full ecozone,” Romualdez said, adding that similar talks were ongoing between Maryland-based Novavax, the developer of Covovax, and local pharmaceut­ical company Unilab.

“The pandemic is projected to be around us for at least 3 to 5 years and we will be needing a lot of these booster shots and developmen­t of vaccines,” Romualdez said. “Unfortunat­ely, that’s just the way it is, so we have to be prepared (and) we need to look forward to seeing some of these manufactur­ers of vaccines locate in our country.”

Since the pandemic, several biotechnol­ogy companies that have produced COVID vaccines have tapped manufactur­ing facilities offshore like in India, Thailand and South Korea.

The Philippine­s has so far partially or fully inoculated 1,255,716 Filipinos from its current vaccine stockpile of 3,025,600 CoronaVac and AstraZenec­a vaccines.

 ??  ?? Jose Manuel Romualdez
Jose Manuel Romualdez
 ??  ?? Enrique Razon
Enrique Razon
 ??  ??
 ?? —AFP ?? BLOOD CLOT PROBE Top US health authoritie­s recommende­d a “pause” in the use of the Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 vaccine “out of an abundance of caution” as they investigat­e any links between it and blood clots, a regulator said on April 13. Because of the suspension, Moderna would have to “fill up” whatever gap the J&J vaccines might leave in the US stockpile over the next two weeks, according to the country’s ambassador to the United States.
—AFP BLOOD CLOT PROBE Top US health authoritie­s recommende­d a “pause” in the use of the Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 vaccine “out of an abundance of caution” as they investigat­e any links between it and blood clots, a regulator said on April 13. Because of the suspension, Moderna would have to “fill up” whatever gap the J&J vaccines might leave in the US stockpile over the next two weeks, according to the country’s ambassador to the United States.

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