Enterprise-Record (Chico)

Brazil’s virus outlook darkens amid vaccine supply snags

- By Diane Jeantet and David Biller

RIO DE JANEIRO >> April is shaping up to be Brazil’s darkest month yet in the pandemic, with hospitals struggling with a crush of patients, deaths on track for record highs and few signs of a reprieve from a troubled vaccinatio­n program in Latin America’s largest nation.

The Health Ministry has cut its outlook for vaccine supplies in April three times already, to half their initial level, and the country’s two biggest laboratori­es are facing supply constraint­s.

The delays also mean tens of thousands more deaths as the particular­ly contagious P.1 variant of COVID-19 sweeps Brazil. It has recorded about 350,000 of the 2.9 million virus deaths worldwide, behind only the U.S. toll of over 560,000.

Brazil’s seven-day rolling average has increased to 2,820 deaths per day, compared with the global average of 10,608 per day, according to data through April 8 from Johns Hopkins University.

The death toll is forecast to continue rising in the next two weeks to an average of nearly 3,500 per day before receding, according to the University of Washington’s Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation.

Public health experts blame President Jair Bolsonaro for refusing to enact strict measures to halt infections and for clashing with governors and mayors who did.

Failure to control the spread has been compounded by the Health Ministry betting big on a single vaccine, AstraZenec­a, then buying only one backup, the Chinese-manufactur­ed CoronaVac, after supply problems emerged. Authoritie­s ignored other producers and squandered opportunit­ies until it was too late to get large quantities of vaccine for the first half of 2021.

With extensive experience in successful, massive vaccinatio­n programs, Brazil should have known better, said Claudio Maierovitc­h, former head of Brazil’s health regulator.

“The big problem is that Brazil did not look for alternativ­es when it had the chance,” he said. “When several countries were placing their bets, signing contracts with different suppliers, the Brazilian government didn’t even have vaccinatio­n on its agenda.”

For months, Bolsonaro’s administra­tion ignored pleas to sign more than one contract for vaccines. The president publicly questioned the reliabilit­y of other shots and scoffed at contractua­l terms, suggesting that recipients of the Pfizer vaccine would have no legal recourse were they to transform into alligators. He insisted he wouldn’t force anyone to get vaccinated and only recently said he might get a shot himself.

Denise Garrett, vice president of the Sabin Vaccine Institute that advocates for expanding global vaccine access, said she despaired at the government strategy. Brazil has been far and away Latin America’s immunizati­on frontrunne­r, so much so that she hadn’t seen it in the same league as the region’s other countries.

Given the problems in vaccine developmen­t and distributi­on, “it’s definitely not a good idea to put all your eggs in one basket,” she said from Washington.

 ?? FELIPE DANA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Mobile Emergency Care Service (SAMU) workers Gabrielle Carlos, top, and Joao Vericimo, move a COVID-19patient to an ambulance as he is transferre­d to a municipal hospital dedicated to COVID-19in Duque de Caxias, Rio de Janeiro state, Brazil, Tuesday.
FELIPE DANA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Mobile Emergency Care Service (SAMU) workers Gabrielle Carlos, top, and Joao Vericimo, move a COVID-19patient to an ambulance as he is transferre­d to a municipal hospital dedicated to COVID-19in Duque de Caxias, Rio de Janeiro state, Brazil, Tuesday.

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