As primary school students return to physical classrooms following the Easter holidays, the Ministry of Health is closer to acquiring COVID-19 vaccines for that age group.
While the Ministry does not yet have a date for when the vaccines will arrive, Minister of Health Terrence Deyalsingh says it received a draft legal agreement from the Government of Spain for a donation of Pfizer-BioNTech vaccines approved for children ages five-11.
At the Ministry's weekly COVID-19 Update, Deyalsingh explained that all vaccines entering the country, whether through purchase or donation, come with legal hurdles to cross. The draft agreement is now with the Ministry of the Attorney General and Legal Affairs for vetting. Once that Ministry approves it, the process moves the logistical arrangements of getting the vaccines into the country.
While the Government plans to vaccinate younger children, the daily vaccination dropped to a paltry estimated average of 400. Up to yesterday, there were 709,616 vaccinated people, representing 50.7 per cent of the population, with 146,889 people taking booster shots.
“We continue to urge people to get vaccinated. It could really save your life. At this stage of the game, even two deaths, three deaths, four, five a day; those numbers are still avoidable. They can be significantly reduced because the same trend we are seeing is that the majority of those deaths are people who are unvaccinated,” Deyalsingh said.
While a common reason for rejecting the vaccine was that some people recovered from COVID-19, Technical Director of the Epidemiology Division Dr Avery Hinds said that protection decreases with time. While vaccine-induced immunity contributes to the lower spread during this phase of the pandemic, Hinds said so does natural immunity to the current COVID variant circulating.
However, he said that natural immunity wanes faster than vaccine-induced immunity. Even with the vaccines, there is a need for boosters in certain age groups and physiology.
“There is a contribution of those who have been previously infected and are currently immune but just bearing in mind that contribution will decline as natural immunity wanes,” Hinds said.
Reporter: Kevon Felmine