USA TODAY International Edition

Critics say US is hoarding vaccines

Calls to share supply grow as India suffers

- Deirdre Shesgreen

WASHINGTON – The Biden administra­tion is besieged with requests from foreign leaders for help accessing COVID- 19 vaccines.

But while President Joe Biden has vowed the U. S. would be “an arsenal of vaccines” for the world, his advisers have yet to detail how or when the United States would begin sharing its supply. Instead, Biden has repeatedly said his administra­tion would help the rest of the world only after all Americans have access to the vaccines.

That position is increasing­ly untenable, particular­ly in the face of India’s COVID- 19 crisis and a growing global chasm in vaccinatio­n rates, global health experts and advocates say.

India broke another record this weekend with more than 400,000 daily new cases, and its daily death toll doubled over 10 days ( April 19- 29). Independen­t reporting suggests deaths are vastly undercount­ed.

“We are not dealing with one COVID pandemic. There are multiple strains involved, multiple pandemics really, in different parts of the country,” said Manoj Gopalakris­hna, CEO of the nonprofit group CARE India.

In Delhi and other cities, the health care system is “completely overwhelme­d,” he said, with ill patients parked outside hospitals waiting for beds to become available and front- line workers running out of oxygen and other supplies.

Gopalakris­hna noted that India has only 95,000 critical- care beds for its population of 1.4 billion people. The country needs everything right now – from emergency supplies to COVID- 19 vaccines, he said.

As the crisis in India became more urgent last week, the White House said the U. S. would share as many as 60 million doses of the AstraZenec­a COVID- 19 vaccine once it receives federal approval in the coming months. And the U. S. Agency for Internatio­nal Developmen­t began flying emergency supplies to the country, including oxygen cylinders, rapid diagnostic tests and 100,000 N95 masks to help India protect its front- line health workers.

“Our assistance, we hope, will have a catalytic effect on society more broadly here and around the world to come to the aid of the Indian people,” said State Department spokesman Ned Price.

Those are “great, welcome steps, though it has been a little late,” said Gopalakris­hna, though he said initial frustratio­n has softened into appreciati­on.

Gayle Smith, the State Department’s coordinato­r for global COVID- 19 response and health security, said the U. S. intends “to remain fully engaged and do what we can to get through this crisis period ... this is going to need urgent and persistent attention for some time.”

Meanwhile in the United States, infection and death rates are dropping as the Biden administra­tion continues its aggressive vaccinatio­n campaign. About 43% of Americans have received at least one COVID- 19 shot, compared with less than 9% of India’s population, according to Our World in Data.

Vaccine availabili­ty: ‘ An apartheid’

Globally, more than 1 billion vaccine doses have been administer­ed – with 82% of shots given in high- and middleinco­me countries and just 0.3% in lowincome countries, according to the World Health Organizati­on.

“It is an apartheid,” Winnie Byanyima, executive director of UNAIDS, said in a briefing April 28 hosted by the ONE Campaign, an anti- poverty and global health nonprofit. “We knew it was coming. We have allowed it to happen.”

The vaccine divide could be further exacerbate­d by India’s crisis. India is home to the world’s largest vaccine manufactur­er, but the country has restricted COVID- 19 vaccine exports amid its domestic surge.

Internatio­nal aid groups and global health advocates are ramping up pressure on the U. S. and other G7 countries to take a range of steps to expand vaccine access – from sharing more of their own doses to waiving pharmaceut­ical companies’ vaccine patents.

“Look, I get it. Wealthy countries hedged their bets early on” in the pandemic when it was unclear when vaccines would become available, said Tom Hart, acting president of the ONE Campaign.

“But now that vaccines are rolling out, that hedging looks like hoarding.”

‘ America First’ in COVID- 19 battle?

But the politics – global and domestic – are fraught for Biden. He has promised to craft a foreign policy that works for America’s middle class, a twist on the Trump administra­tion’s isolationi­st “America First” doctrine. At the same time, Biden has vowed to restore America’s standing as a leader on the world stage.

Perhaps nowhere are those two pledges more in conflict than with the coronaviru­s as Biden races to save American lives and reboot the U. S. economy while confronted with desperate pleas for help from key allies like India and neighbors like Canada and Mexico.

“The president’s calculatio­n remains rooted fundamenta­lly in the concern about what’s happening here domestical­ly,” said J. Stephen Morrison, director of the Global Health Policy Center at the Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies, a Washington think tank.

But Morrison and others say that approach is dangerous and wrong.

“It’s going to aggravate our allies, and it’s going to feed the narrative that we’re sailing into radically divergent outcomes in the world,” he said. The U. S. and the United Kingdom, among other countries, are headed toward “a very positive set of outcomes,” Morrison said, “but the vast majority of low- and middle- income countries are going to be looking at no solution until 2023.”

With the U. S. situation improving, he said, “we should be moving immediatel­y to pivot toward significant ( vaccine) sharing” and using U. S. influence to create a more coherent global strategy, including rapid expansion of manufactur­ing capacity and technology transfers.

Smith said the administra­tion is still crafting a U. S. plan.

“There is huge demand for vaccine all over the world,” Smith said in a briefing Friday. “To be honest, we have not made a decision yet as to the criteria for allocating those vaccines.”

Smith said decisions would be based on “what impact we can have on the spread of the virus ( and) where needs are most acute.”

Biden’s advisers say the administra­tion is committed to a global response and note the White House has pledged $ 4 billion to COVAX, the global vaccine alliance dedicated to helping poor countries inoculate their population­s. The White House also has promised to advance 4 million AstraZenec­a vaccine doses to Mexico and Canada.

Smith noted the U. S. is the largest donor to COVAX.

“This is going to be a steady process for some time,” she said. “It’s a huge operation.”

A ‘ five- alarm fire’

Arthur Caplan, a professor of bioethics at the NYU School of Medicine in New York City, said the White House was right to engage in a bit of “vaccine nationalis­m” when the vaccine rollout began. The U. S. then led the world in deaths, he noted, and Biden was justified in focusing on Americans first.

“You don’t wake up in the morning and say: ‘ Well, I could feed my kids, or I could feed kids in Africa. I guess I’ll flip a coin,’ ” he said. There is a moral obligation in a crisis, he said, to help “your friends, your neighbors, and even your country.”

But the dynamics have shifted, he said, as U. S. infections and deaths drop and vaccinatio­n rates rise. The White House should be debating where to ship vaccines, not whether to ship them, he said.

Although the instinct might be to help poor countries first, that might not be the fastest way to end the pandemic, Caplan added. He noted, for example, that India has a limited capacity to vaccinate its population right now – about 3 million shots a day.

“Brazil and India may need equipment – ventilator­s, protective gear – much more right now than they need vaccines,” Caplan said, while Canada and other wealthy nations may benefit more from an infusion of U. S.- purchased vaccines. The U. S. also needs to help other countries develop manufactur­ing capacity, he said.

“It’s the long- term answer,” he said, because every country will need COVID- 19 booster shots, as well as possible new vaccines to combat variants of the virus. Otherwise, “the world is just going to be doing this again and again.”

Hundreds of millions of doses

There’s no question the U. S. has an adequate vaccine pipeline.

Last year, the Trump administra­tion prepurchas­ed 300 million doses of the AstraZenec­a vaccine, 200 million each from Moderna and Pfizer- BioNTech, and 100 million each from Johnson & Johnson and Novavax, all to be delivered after the vaccines were authorized. The Biden administra­tion, which took office Jan. 20, has purchased another 100 million doses each of the Moderna, J& J and Pfizer- BioNTech vaccines.

The U. S. will have enough vaccine doses to meet U. S. demand for the vaccine in mid- to- late May, according to an April 20 analysis by the Kaiser Family Foundation. Then the U. S. will hit an “enthusiasm limit” among those who remain hesitant to get inoculated, although more Americans could drop their objections and line up.

“It appears we are quite close to the tipping point,” the Kaiser report says.

The longer the Biden administra­tion puts off sharing its vaccine surplus, the greater the risk that more virulent coronaviru­s variants emerge and circle back to hit the U. S. population, Caplan and others warned.

“This is very, very frightenin­g as we look at what’s happening in India – both in and of itself and what it could mean to the next evolution of this pandemic,” Hart said.

He called India a “harbinger” as lowincome countries with weak health care systems and densely populated cities suffer catastroph­ic outbreaks.

Morrison said he understand­s that Biden “doesn’t want to be diverted in any way from getting control over the pandemic in the United States, and we are not yet there.” There are fears about the coronaviru­s variants causing new spikes in the U. S., along with efforts to overcome vaccine hesitancy among key population­s.

But “we have to walk and chew gum,” he said. “We’ve got to finish what’s a very promising vaccinatio­n campaign in the United States, but not delay in addressing these other five- alarm fires that are going on.”

 ?? CHANNI ANAND/ AP ?? Relatives grieve at a crematoriu­m in Jammu as India’s COVID- 19 outbreak deepens.
CHANNI ANAND/ AP Relatives grieve at a crematoriu­m in Jammu as India’s COVID- 19 outbreak deepens.
 ?? AJIT SOLANKI/ AP ?? Men escort a sick relative to a dedicated COVID- 19 government hospital in Ahmedabad, India, last week. India has only 95,000 critical- care beds for its population of 1.4 billion people, according to the nonprofit group CARE India.
AJIT SOLANKI/ AP Men escort a sick relative to a dedicated COVID- 19 government hospital in Ahmedabad, India, last week. India has only 95,000 critical- care beds for its population of 1.4 billion people, according to the nonprofit group CARE India.

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