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Chinese jabs saving lives in the Amazon

Vaccines from Sinopharm, Sinovac help inoculate indigenous people

- By SERGIO HELD in Cajica, Colombia The writer is a freelance journalist for China Daily.

Chinese vaccines have become key assets in the fight against COVID-19 deep in the Amazon jungle of South America. The vaccines, from drugmakers Sinopharm and Sinovac Biotech, are being taken deep into the forests, often after arduous boat trips, to reach indigenous tribes. Some of the jab recipients are not even aware of the coronaviru­s.

Peruvian health authoritie­s are relying on Sinopharm’s vaccine to reach the most inaccessib­le communitie­s. Healthcare workers often have to travel by boat, ride mules and walk deep into the jungle.

These logistical challenges are also present in neighborin­g Brazil, home to the largest portion of the Amazon rainforest. The jungle extends across nine countries.

In Brazil, the army is a key player in the distributi­on of Sinovac’s CoronaVac vaccines. Developed in Beijing and finished and packaged by the Butantan Institute in Sao Paulo, the vaccine makes up the backbone of the country’s vaccinatio­n efforts.

More than 4.6 million doses of COVID-19 vaccines have been distribute­d throughout Brazil’s northweste­rn Amazonas state, home to about to 3.8 million people.

“Most indigenous people in the (Brazilian) Amazon have access to modern communicat­ions, such as radio and television, and many have mobile phones,” said William Magnusson, a senior researcher with the biodiversi­ty unit of the National Institute of Amazonian Research in Manaus, the state’s capital.

Magnusson recently witnessed the distributi­on of vaccines to areas deep into the jungle by the Brazilian army.

“I was in a relatively remote indigenous community on the upper Jurua River. They advised us that the army was arriving the next day to vaccinate them and they seemed wellinform­ed,” he said.

In the administra­tive department of Amazonas in Colombia, 82,373 doses of COVID-19 vaccines, mostly CoronaVac, have been distribute­d. The territory, with almost 38,000 people, has seen the virus claim 256 lives since April 2020. But there have been just five deaths since July 29 this year.

“Mortality rates decreased, not only due to vaccinatio­n, but also due to the cultural factors of our indigenous peoples and their internal care,” said

Yenica Acosta, a member of the lower house of Colombia’s parliament.

Acosta said indigenous people in the Amazonas department have been largely spared the worst of the pandemic, with most COVID-19 deaths in the territory occurring only in Leticia, the capital city, and Puerto Narino, the second-largest city.

“Our indigenous peoples suffered truly little from this pandemic. However, all the safety measures have been deployed for them, as well as (for) the entire public, with a healthcare prevention strategy in which vaccines have been key,” Acosta said.

“We continue with vaccinatio­n in

the most distant areas of our department. We must highlight teamwork, as well as the awareness of our population.”

Vital for the mission are clear communicat­ion — not only in Spanish and Portuguese — and efforts against the spread of disinforma­tion.

In Peru, the government has carried out awareness campaigns in 22 indigenous languages in its vaccinatio­n strategy for people in the Andean country.

“The Ministry of Culture disseminat­ed messages in indigenous languages on the importance of the COVID-19 vaccine to citizens of the

Awajun indigenous people, who live in the native communitie­s of the province of San Ignacio, in the Cajamarca region,” the Peruvian government said.

Mezones-Holguin, a researcher from San Ignacio de Loyola University, said, “The point is not only to arrive and give the first dose, but also to be able to arrive with the second dose of the vaccine.”

In Colombia and Brazil, authoritie­s translated informatio­n about the pandemic to aid their outreach to indigenous communitie­s.

 ?? EDMAR BARROS / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Brazilian healthcare workers, with COVID-19 vaccines, navigate flooded streets in the Amazon town of Anama on May 14.
EDMAR BARROS / ASSOCIATED PRESS Brazilian healthcare workers, with COVID-19 vaccines, navigate flooded streets in the Amazon town of Anama on May 14.

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