Cape Times

Call for increase in supply of vaccines

- SIPHOKAZI VUSO siphokazi.vuso@inl.co.za

CALLS are growing for a rapid increase in the supply of vaccines to reach the level of vaccinatio­n required to flatten the curve amid a massive surge in Covid-19 infections across parts of the country.

President Cyril Ramaphosa announced the alarming spread of the Delta variant during his address Sunday night.

“This variant was first detected in India at the end of March, and is now found in 85 countries.

“The Delta variant spread like wildfire in India in an alarming manner.

“The Delta variant has now been detected in five of our provinces, namely the Eastern Cape, Free State, Gauteng, KwaZulu-Natal and Western Cape,” he said.

Senior lecturer at the Department of Global Health at Stellenbos­ch University Dr Jo Barnes said the Delta variant was particular­ly “dangerous”.

“The most prominent characteri­stic of the Delta variant is its fast spread: estimates are that the variant is 1.5 times more contagious than the Alpha variant, which was first seen in Britain.

“That means that on average each person who acquires the Delta variant will pass the infection on to between six and eight other people.

“One of the most important culprits in this regard are the young people who refuse to adhere to precaution­s and socialise without care, banking on the hope that they will not get ill.

“This is a vicious cycle we seem not to be able to break,” Barnes said.

She said the country “desperatel­y” needed to speed up its vaccinatio­n roll-out.

“It is not only a question of obtaining more vaccines, although the authoritie­s tend to hide behind that.

“We need much more effort to persuade the vaccine-hesitant to take the vaccine and we need to drasticall­y improve our education campaigns so that they include more informatio­n than just bold instructio­ns,” said Barnes.

Premier Alan Winde said the province was ready and able to scale up life-saving vaccinatio­ns beyond 120 000 vaccinatio­ns a week and were preparing mega-vaccinatio­n sites to do so.

“We however need more vaccines to ramp this programme up further. We therefore call for a rapid increase in the supplies of vaccines so that we reach the level of vaccinatio­ns required to flatten the curve.

“We also call for global manufactur­ers to reconsider their position of not supplying to subnationa­l entities. We have the budget and the processes in place, and we remain ready to procure additional vaccines,” he said.

By yesterday the Western Cape had 18 031 active Covid-19 infections, with a total number of 320 340 cases and 290 014 recoveries.

The province's coronaviru­s dashboard has recorded 99 additional deaths since it last updated on Friday, bringing the total number of Covid-19-related deaths in the province to 12 295.

“On June 25, we received

191 880 doses of Pfizer, enabling us to increase our weekly targets to 80 000 residents vaccinated between June 28 and July 2, or week seven. In week eight, we will again increase this target to 100 000.

“This will assist us in getting our vaccine programme back on track following previous constraint­s in the national vaccine supply.

“We have also so far received 26 400 doses of Johnson & Johnson (J&J) for those in the education sector.

“The weekly supply pipeline of J&J is expected to be confirmed over the coming week.

“I call on residents who have not yet done so, and who are eligible, to register for their vaccine on the Electronic Vaccine Data System,” Winde said.

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