Houston Chronicle Sunday

Boosters seen as harming poor countries

- By Azi Paybarah

As people in wealthy nations snap up booster shots amid the rapid spread of the omicron variant, the World Health Organizati­on’s leader warned that universal access to extra doses in highly inoculated countries could worsen global vaccine inequality and prolong the pandemic.

That imbalance will give “the virus more opportunit­y to spread and mutate,” WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s said last week.

“It’s important to remember,” he said, “that the vast majority of hospitaliz­ations and deaths are in unvaccinat­ed people, not unboosted people.” Later, he added, “No country can boost its way out of the pandemic.”

Since COVID-19 vaccines were developed about a year ago, rich countries have had greater access to them despite global efforts to shrink that disparity. About 73 percent of shots that have gone into arms worldwide have been administer­ed in high- and upper-middle-income countries, according to a New York Times tracker. Only 0.9 percent of doses have been administer­ed in lowincome countries.

“It’s frankly difficult to understand how a year since the first vaccines were administer­ed, 3 in 4 health workers in Africa remain unvaccinat­ed,” Ghebreyesu­s said.

He did not criticize specific countries by name but did say that “there is no doubt that the inequitabl­e sharing of those vaccines” has cost many lives. He also questioned “why some countries are now rolling out blanket booster programs.”

Government­s in Europe and elsewhere are accelerati­ng booster shots as the scientific evidence accumulate­s that two vaccine doses are insufficie­nt to stop infection from the highly transmissi­ble omicron variant, though the vaccines appear to reduce the risk of hospitaliz­ation and serious illness. Some public health experts who had opposed a boosters-for-all approach have changed their minds since the variant emerged.

Last week, Israeli leaders said they would offer a fourth round of vaccines to people older than 60 and to medical workers. France has shortened the wait before people can receive a booster shot to four months from five. Britain will offer all eligible adults booster shots by the end of the year, a month earlier than planned.

And in the U.S., where health officials have recommende­d

booster shots for all adults, the omicron variant is motivating more than half of vaccinated adults to get a booster shot, according to a recent poll by the Kaiser Family Foundation.

Although health officials and public health researcher­s are urging Americans to get vaccinated and boosted,

the going has been slow. Just over half of Americans 65 and older — the population most vulnerable to a severe outcome from the virus — have received a booster.

Public health experts worry that socioecono­mic disparitie­s in U.S. vaccinatio­n rates will be exacerbate­d as booster shots roll out. Difficulty in taking time off work and disconnect­ion from health care systems have contribute­d to a persistent gap in vaccinatio­n rates between the most and least socioecono­mically vulnerable counties in the U.S.

Looking ahead to holiday celebratio­ns, Ghebreyesu­s warned that people who have received booster shots should not rely on them as a substitute for other safety measures such as wearing masks and avoiding crowded indoor gatherings.

“Boosters cannot be seen as a ticket to go ahead with the planned celebratio­ns without the need for other precaution­s,” he said, adding that the new year “must be the end of the COVID pandemic” as well as “the beginning of something else: a new era of solidarity.”

 ?? Associated Press file photo ?? A medical worker prepares a COVID-19 shot in Jerusalem in September. Israeli leaders have said they would offer a fourth round of vaccines to some.
Associated Press file photo A medical worker prepares a COVID-19 shot in Jerusalem in September. Israeli leaders have said they would offer a fourth round of vaccines to some.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States