Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

WHO: COVID-19 health emergency could end in 2022

- Jamey Keaten

GENEVA – The head of emergencie­s at the World Health Organizati­on (WHO) said Tuesday that the worst of the coronaviru­s pandemic – deaths, hospitaliz­ations and lockdowns – could be over this year if huge inequities in vaccinatio­ns and medicines are addressed quickly.

Dr. Michael Ryan, speaking during a panel discussion on vaccine equity hosted by the World Economic Forum (WEF), said “we may never end the virus” because such pandemic viruses “end up becoming part of the ecosystem.”

But “we have a chance to end the public health emergency this year if we do the things that we’ve been talking about,” he said.

WHO has slammed the imbalance in COVID-19 vaccinatio­n between rich and poor countries as a catastroph­ic moral failure. Fewer than 10% of people in lower-income countries have received one dose of COVID-19 vaccine.

Ryan told the virtual gathering of world and business leaders that if vaccines and other tools aren’t shared fairly, the tragedy of the virus, which has so far killed more than 5.5 million people worldwide, would continue.

“What we need to do is get to low levels of disease incidence with maximum vaccinatio­n of our population­s, so nobody has to die,” Ryan said. “The issue is – it’s the death. It’s the hospitaliz­ations. It’s the disruption of our social, economic, political systems that’s caused the tragedy – not the virus.”

Ryan also waded into the growing debate about whether COVID-19 should be considered endemic, a label some countries like Spain have called for to help better live with the virus, or still a pandemic – involving intensified measures that many countries have taken to fight the spread.

“Endemic malaria kills hundreds of thousands of people; endemic HIV; endemic violence in our inner cities. Endemic in itself does not mean good. Endemic just means it’s here forever,” he said.

Public health officials have warned it is highly unlikely COVID-19 will be eliminated and say it will continue to kill people, though at much lower levels, even after it becomes endemic.

Fellow panelist Gabriela Bucher, executive director of the anti-poverty organizati­on Oxfam Internatio­nal, cited the “enormous urgency” of fairer distributi­on of vaccines and the need for large-scale production. She said resources to fight the pandemic were being “hoarded by a few companies and a few shareholde­rs.”

John Nkengasong, director of the Africa Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, decried the “total collapse of global cooperatio­n and solidarity,” over the last two years, saying it was “totally unacceptab­le” that only 7% of Africa’s population was fully vaccinated.

He also sought to douse the belief among some that vaccine hesitancy is widespread in Africa, citing studies that say 80% of the continent’s population­s were ready to get shots if the vaccines were available.

In a separate press briefing Tuesday, WHO’s director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s said the omicron variant of COVID-19 “continues to sweep the world” and said there were 18 million new COVID-19 cases reported last week.

 ?? SALVATORE DI NOLFI/KEYSTONE VIA AP FILE ?? World Economic Forum President Børge Brende of Norway hosts the second day of the online Davos Agenda meeting on Tuesday in Cologny near Geneva, Switzerlan­d.
SALVATORE DI NOLFI/KEYSTONE VIA AP FILE World Economic Forum President Børge Brende of Norway hosts the second day of the online Davos Agenda meeting on Tuesday in Cologny near Geneva, Switzerlan­d.

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