Countries gear up to procure virus vaccines
Infections increase as winter looms, prompt global race for inoculation
Coronavirus infections have surged again across the world amid the onset of winter, with many countries strategizing to secure vaccines to protect their populations.
More than 68 million people have been reported to be infected by COVID-19 globally and more than 1.55 million people have died, according to a Reuters tally.
US President Donald Trump’s lawyer Rudy Giuliani also tested positive for COVID-19, the latest in a long string of people close to the White House. Giuliani, 76, was admitted to the Medstar Georgetown University Hospital in Washington on Dec 6, according to US media.
The White House has been criticized for shunning safety guidelines, with Trump himself testing positive for COVID-19 in October.
California’s Governor Gavin Newsom has announced that more than half of the US state’s 40 million people are subject to a stay-at-home order and many businesses will be closed.
A Reuters tally showed that more than 286,000 people in the US have died from COVID-19. In recent weeks, the country has regularly seen more than 2,000 deaths a day, similar to the early days of the pandemic. The surge could be partly due to the Thanksgiving
holiday, when millions of US residents traveled around the country, BBC reported.
US President- elect Joe Biden, who is expected to be sworn in on Jan 20, plans to nominate California’s Attorney General Xavier Becerra as secretary of health and human services and Rochelle Walensky, chief of infectious diseases at Massachusetts General Hospital, to run the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Reuters reported.
In India, data from its federal health ministry showed on Dec 7 that 32,981 new coronavirus cases were reported in the last 24 hours.
The South Asian country’s cumulative cases now total 9.74 million, the second-highest tally in the world after the US, according to Reuters.
Japan’s Chief Cabinet Secretary Katsunobu Kato said on Dec 7 that the government will send doctors and nurses from the country’s de facto army, the Self-Defense Forces, to the northern and western prefectures of Hokkaido and Osaka where the coronavirus is rapidly spreading, according to Japanese news agency Jiji Press.
Japan’s public broadcaster NHK reported that the city of Asahikawa in Hokkaido has seen infection clusters at local hospitals.
South Korea’s President Moon Jaein
on Dec 7 ordered testing for the virus to be expanded by mobilizing the military and more people from the public service, as the country continued to report triple-digit daily new cases, Reuters reported.
Countries are strategizing to secure shots to protect their populations against COVID-19, with Britain and Russia beginning COVID-19 vaccinations this week.
The Serum Institute of India has sought emergency use authorization from its drug regulator for AstraZeneca’s COVID-19 vaccine on Dec 6, according to Indian media reports, citing the Press Trust of India.
India is the largest buyer of COVID-19 vaccines in the world with 1.6 billion doses, with 500 million doses of the Oxford University
AstraZeneca vaccine candidate, 1 billion from US company Novavax and 100 million doses of the Sputnik V candidate from Russia’s Gamaleya Research Institute, according to the US-based Duke University Global Health Innovation Center.
The South Asian country is followed by the European Union, which has confirmed 1.58 billion doses. The US, the worst affected country so far, has managed to purchase just over a billion doses, according to Duke University’s Launch and Scale Speedometer analysis.
Shahid Jameel, director of the Trivedi School of Biosciences of Ashoka University, said 1.6 billion doses would cover 800 million people or 60 percent of India’s population, The (Chennai) Hindu reported.
This, the virologist said, should be enough to develop herd immunity, a form of indirect protection from infectious disease that occurs when a sufficient percentage of a population has become immune to an infection.
Indonesian President Joko Widodo announced on Dec 6 that the country has received 1.2 million doses from China’s Sinovac Biotech and is working to secure another 1.8 million doses by early January, according to Bloomberg.
High-income countries currently hold a confirmed 3.8 billion doses, upper middle-income countries hold 829 million doses, and lower middleincome countries hold more than 1.7 billion doses, according to Duke University analysis.