Mail & Guardian

Nigeria ‘being careful’ about private sector Covid help

- Adeola Oladipupo This is an edited version of an article first published in

Just 0.7% of Nigerians are fully vaccinated. But the country will soon start receiving almost 42-million doses of Covid-19 vaccines as it steps up its inoculatio­n campaign. The government has acquired cold chain equipment to store the vaccines. Everything seems ready to go.

However, private sector healthcare workers say the government handling the roll-out on its own could complicate the vaccinatio­n push.

The government says it has good reason for going it alone: contracts. The minister of state for health, Olorunnimb­e Mamora, told The Continent that the ministry was cautious about allowing private-sector involvemen­t because of an indemnity clause it has with manufactur­ers, and because of the risk of fake Covid-19 vaccines being circulated if procuremen­t is opened.

“The manufactur­ers have said that for countries to have access to the vaccines, they must sign indemnific­ation,” Mamora said. “This means that they won’t be liable for any reaction those who took the vaccine present with. This makes the government liable.”

He added: “To be sure of the sources of the vaccines and take absolute responsibi­lity, we go through government-to-government bilateral processes and establishe­d platforms.”

For now, this means the government is “being careful” before it involves the private sector.

In the first phase of the vaccinatio­n campaign, it took Nigeria five months to exhaust the four-million doses of the Oxford/astrazenec­a vaccine. The roll-out was handled by state authoritie­s following directives from the National Primary Health Care Developmen­t Agency, a federal government body.

Other African countries, including Ghana and South Africa, are supplement­ing government efforts by incorporat­ing the private sector into different stages of their vaccinatio­n programmes. In Nigeria, where the private sector provides 70% of the country’s healthcare needs, it is a conspicuou­s omission.

According to Dr Egbe Osifodawod­u, a health policy expert, engaging private healthcare providers such as hospitals and pharmacies could help reduce pressure on the federal government and ensure that jabs are efficientl­y used.

“Some private sector players in Nigeria have the capacity to procure high-quality vaccines if licenced, and people who have private or state health insurance or can convenient­ly pay out-of-pocket could patronise them,” Osifo-dawodu said.

For those who cannot, he said the government can then ensure people who cannot afford to buy vaccines get them for free.

Right now, Covid vaccinatio­n is free for everyone in Nigeria who wants a shot.

Clare Omatseye, president of the West Africa Private Healthcare Federation, an umbrella group of healthcare providers, told The Continent the “private sector could be engaged to solve inefficien­cies in the vaccinatio­n value chain: from cold-chain storage to macro and last mile distributi­on, administra­tion and pharmacovi­gilance”.

Nigeria, like most other countries in Africa and the global south, has been afforded little opportunit­y to access vaccines supply chains, largely thanks to hoarding by wealthy nations.

And the longer it takes to secure adequate vaccine stock, the more dangerous it becomes for every country on the planet, because in unvaccinat­ed areas where it is able to spread unchecked, the virus risks mutating beyond the capacity of the current vaccines to contain it, and spreading back out into the world.

As it is, with the Delta variant already hovering on its doorstep, Nigeria will have to vaccinate quickly indeed if it hopes to keep a lid on the highly contagious variant.

‘To ... take absolute responsibi­lity, we go through government­to-government bilateral processes’

The Continent

‘I tried beer; it’s so bitter like omululuza [bitter leaf ]. I asked why they were drinking it, [my friend] told me:“you’ll know the sweetness later.” I tried Johnnie Walker and it was like fire. If it could burn my tongue, what would have happened to the liver and other internal organs?’— Uganda’s President Yoweri Museveni on why he is a teetotalle­r

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