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Row rages over booster shots

- SONIA ELKS

AS US PRESIDENT Joe Biden convened a virtual coronaviru­s summit of world leaders yesterday, critics said plans to offer booster shots in wealthy nations were diverting supplies from unvaccinat­ed, high-risk people in poor countries.

US regulators could authorise a top-up shot of the Pfizer Covid-19 vaccine for older and some high-risk Americans in time for the government to roll them out by tomorrow – a step that would go against World Health Organizati­on (WHO) advice.

Here’s what you need to know about the shots and the evidence for and against:

Which other countries are planning third shots?

Israel is already giving them to adults and children aged 12 or over, while Russia, Chile, the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and South Korea are among the countries that have also approved mass boosters for most or all of the population.

Others, including China, Britain and Germany have announced boosters for those considered more vulnerable to Covid-19, such as older people and health workers.

More countries are likely to bring out their own booster shot programmes to prevent a surge in cases over the northern hemisphere winter. Who is most in need of vaccines? Boosters could increase antibodies and give stronger protection against Covid-19, health experts said.

However, last month the WHO said that data suggested people’s immunity had not waned enough for their firstround jabs to need a top-up, and that shots should go to ensuring the world was vaccinated first.

An estimated 11 billion doses are needed to give everyone in the world two jabs.

And while wealthy nations are rolling out third vaccines, fewer than 2% of people in low-income countries have had even one dose.

In the UAE, one of the countries introducin­g boosters, more than 90% of the population have had at least one dose.

In Britain the figure is over 70% and the US is at 63%, shows the Our World in Data project co-led by Oxford University.

Meanwhile, Nigeria, Uganda and Ethiopia all have only just over 2% of their population­s vaccinated – the majority with only one shot. In

Syria, only 1.6% of people have been reached, and in Haiti, just 0.4%.

The lack of vaccines in poorer nations is not only fuelling global case numbers and deaths, but also risks allowing new, more dangerous coronaviru­s variants to develop, according to some leading global health experts.

On the other hand, richer countries – many of which are seeing a surge in cases due to the highly contagious Delta variant – want to protect their most vulnerable people with boosters to offset waning protection.

“It’s a difficult balance – what do you do for your own country and what do you do for the global population?” said Sian Griffiths, a past president of the Faculty of Public Health in Britain.

Are booster jabs impacting supplies

in poorer countries?

With global demand for jabs outstrippi­ng immediate supply, every extra dose going to a wealthy nation is one that cannot reach poorer countries.

“There is enough vaccine around the world, but it is not going to the right places in the right order,” said WHO senior adviser Bruce Aylward.

Booster shot programmes would make it hard for Africa to meet its target for vaccinatin­g 60% to 70% of the continent’s people, the AU’S top health official said this month.

Some say the situation is more complex.

The number of booster jabs used by individual countries such as Britain represente­d a “drop in the ocean”

of total global need, said virologist Lawrence Young, from the Warwick Medical School in Britain.

But the row highlighte­d the urgent need to develop a wider range of shots and increase manufactur­ing capacity, he said.

What about the risk from variants if much of the world is left unprotecte­d?

This is a real concern – leaving the virus to spread and mutate through a large pool of unvaccinat­ed people increases the risk that new and more dangerous variants could emerge.

That highlighte­d the risk to all nations from failing to protect everyone, said Seth Berkley, chief executive of the Gavi vaccine alliance.

The bottom line?

Whether or not richer countries launched booster campaigns, they must help ensure more people were protected against Covid-19 – a step that would in turn safeguard their own population­s, health experts said.

“As long as the virus continues to grow and spread in population­s, it will continue to mutate,” said Young, adding that the emergence of the Delta variant had already been a “game changer”.

“We can’t think that we’re somehow out of the woods because everyone is OK in this country,” he added, describing the situation in Britain.

“We’ve got to think more globally about how we stamp out the spread of infection and one way to do that is to vaccinate.”

 ?? | REUTERS ?? A HEALTH worker administer­s a dose of the Covid-19 booster vaccine, amid the coronaviru­s disease pandemic, at Midland House in Derby, England.
| REUTERS A HEALTH worker administer­s a dose of the Covid-19 booster vaccine, amid the coronaviru­s disease pandemic, at Midland House in Derby, England.

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