Viet Nam News

COVAX lessons could help vaccine equity for developing economies

- ❱ Putri Widi Saraswati * * Putri Widi Saraswati is an Indonesian public health specialist and medical doctor currently working as a research intern at the United Nations University, Netherland­s Internatio­nal Institute for Global Health (UNU-IIGH), the UN

COVAX was supposed to be the elixir for vaccine inequality – it wasn’t. However, lessons can be taken from previous global experience­s to help make progress.

Most early deaths caused by COVID-19 happened in developing economies. The global scale of the pandemic made clear where most vaccines are distribute­d and who bears the disproport­ionate health burden due to not having access to them. Low-income economies, clearly, had less access to vaccines.

Vaccine manufactur­ers have been heavily criticised by advocates for prioritisi­ng profit over making access to vaccines equitable by retaining high-profit margins, holding on to intellectu­al property rights and production rights, and prioritisi­ng ‘those who can pay most’.

Criticism of ‘pandemic profit’ is particular­ly directed at manufactur­ers who use MRNA technology, a relatively new and promising vaccine technology. Meanwhile, the term ‘vaccine nationalis­m’ was used to describe how countries – especially developed ones – saved large amounts of vaccine doses for their own population, limiting access to doses for low-income economies.

To improve internatio­nal vaccine equity, the COVID-19 Vaccine Global Access mechanism (COVAX) was developed, co-led by the World Health Organisati­on (WHO), vaccine alliance Gavi, and the Coalition For Epidemic Preparedne­ss Innovation­s (CEPI).

It's designed to be a global pool of funds that serves as a procuremen­t mechanism. Backed by donors and high-income economies, the goal is to make COVAX the most attractive customer bidding for vaccines, with the bargaining power to negotiate pricing and enter advanced purchase agreements with manufactur­ers.

In reality, COVAX is plagued by complex political power imbalances between the countries in need, developed economies and the private sector. For example, the so-called self-financing countries that helped finance COVAX had – in many cases – already struck purchasing deals with vaccine manufactur­ers before COVAX amassed enough buying power to secure doses at scale for developing economies.

Donor countries failing to honour their pledge to 'dose share', lagging on their deliveries, earmarking donations, or donating on an ad hoc basis, all caused delays that meant only a small proportion of pledged doses were delivered and many near-expired doses wound up being dumped as ‘donations’.

Meanwhile, manufactur­ers have not donated any pledged vaccine doses to COVAX and shifted instead to selling doses 'at cost' through commercial deals.

Work is underway to develop domestic capacities in developing economies that will reduce dependence on more powerful countries. Tech-transfer can play an important role in expanding the vaccine manufactur­ing capacity in developing economies, improving access and lessening donor dependency.

In June 2021, the WHO announced a partnershi­p with a South African consortium to establish a multilater­al technology transfer hub for MRNA vaccines for COVID-19 and other diseases.

The consortium, Afrigen Biologics and Vaccines, will manufactur­e the MRNA vaccines themselves and train up another manufactur­er. An additional 10 countries will receive tech transfer from the WHO for MRNA vaccines – Indonesia, Bangladesh, Pakistan, Serbia, Việt Nam, Tunisia, Kenya, Egypt, Nigeria, and Senegal.

Important elements for vaccine production are the transfer of the technologi­cal know-how and relevant clinical data, human resource training and capacity building, and addressing the issue of intellectu­al property rights. Another partner for the tech-transfer hubs, the Medicines Patent Pool, has stated that "technology used in the hub is either not covered by patents or that licences and/or commitment­s-not-to-enforce are in place to enable freedom to operate" via "voluntary participat­ion of intellectu­al property holders".

There is still concern from experts that the reluctance of MRNA vaccine manufactur­ers to fully abandon their intellectu­al property rights will significan­tly undermine the hub’s activities and its sustainabi­lity.

The innovative financing mechanism tried by COVAX – and the challenges it faced – raises a critical issue for technology transfer sites in developing economies: how to find and sustain financing.

The methods and materials used in MRNA technology are still relatively expensive, challengin­g the potential for scalabilit­y and cost-effectiven­ess. The upfront total cost to produce 100 million doses of MRNA vaccines annually is between US$127 million and $270 million, according to modelling.

One widely cited as successful example of innovative vaccine financing is the Internatio­nal Finance Facility for Immunisati­on (IFFIM). The facility issues ‘vaccine bonds’ to investors, mostly based in developed economies, mobilising the funds to frontload the immunisati­on of children in developing economies with secondary support from government donors.

The IFFIM has helped deliver vaccines to children who would have otherwise missed out but its model has issues. Its complex relationsh­ip between the developmen­t sector and the private capital market has transferre­d a significan­t amount of profit to the private actors involved in the form of costly transactio­n fees, intermedia­ry fees, or interest with financial risks backed up by public money.

Health interventi­ons that can save many lives, such as vaccines, should be accessible to everyone at the time they need them – especially those who are most vulnerable. Many approaches have been taken to make vaccine equity a reality, from ethical-based pledged agreements to market and tech-based solutions.

But the pandemic and issues around vaccine access show the right mix is needed to solve a highly complicate­d problem in which political and commercial interests intersect with a need to save as many lives as possible.

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