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Friday, May 9, 2025

The world has failed at vaccine equity. Will 2022 be different?

by

1233 days ago
20211222
A Nigeria civil servant receives an AstraZeneca coronavirus vaccine in Abuja, Nigeria [Gbemiga Olamikan/AP Photo]

A Nigeria civil servant receives an AstraZeneca coronavirus vaccine in Abuja, Nigeria [Gbemiga Olamikan/AP Photo]

By Joseph Stepan­sky | AL JAZEERA

 

■ Hoard­ing of COVID shots hin­dered eq­ui­table glob­al roll­out in 2021, and ex­perts warn of dis­tri­b­u­tion chal­lenges next year ■

 

(AL JAZEERA) — On De­cem­ber 4, 2020, a 90-year-old grand­moth­er in the Unit­ed King­dom be­came the first per­son in the world to re­ceive a vac­cine proven to be high­ly ef­fec­tive against COVID-19, kick­ing off a roll­out of in­oc­u­lants de­vel­oped with un­prece­dent­ed speed un­der dire cir­cum­stances in high-in­come coun­tries across the globe.

Two and half months lat­er, on Feb­ru­ary 24, the first vac­cines shipped un­der the CO­V­AX ini­tia­tive, a World Health Or­ga­ni­za­tion (WHO), GAVI vac­cines al­liance, and Coali­tion for Epi­dem­ic Pre­pared­ness In­no­va­tions (CEPI) mech­a­nism that sought to co­or­di­nate si­mul­ta­ne­ous dis­tri­b­u­tion to both wealthy and poor coun­tries, ar­rived in Ac­cra, Ghana.

Pub­lic health of­fi­cials warned at the time that an eq­ui­table vac­cine roll­out – through CO­V­AX, re­gion­al or­gan­i­sa­tions, and bi­lat­er­al do­na­tions – was es­sen­tial to pre­vent­ing mu­ta­tions of dan­ger­ous vari­ants that would pro­long the pan­dem­ic, and po­ten­tial­ly evade vac­cines.

As 2022 ap­proach­es, with near­ly nine bil­lion vac­cine dos­es ad­min­is­tered world­wide, pub­lic health ex­perts say goals of glob­al vac­cine eq­ui­ty have fall­en woe­ful­ly short. Not on­ly has ramped-up vac­cine pro­duc­tion failed to ad­dress short­ages in low-in­come coun­tries, but there re­mains a long way to go in ad­dress­ing the myr­i­ad chal­lenges re­lat­ed to get­ting vac­cines from tar­ma­cs in low-in­come coun­tries in­to res­i­dents’ arms.

Mean­while, the emer­gence of the Omi­cron vari­ant, which some wide­ly-used vac­cines ap­pear less ef­fec­tive against, could cause even wider up­heaval in glob­al sup­ply and de­liv­ery.

“By vir­tu­al­ly every mea­sure, glob­al vac­cine dis­tri­b­u­tion and eq­ui­ty have been an abysmal fail­ure and a deep moral cri­sis,” Lawrence Gostin, the di­rec­tor of the O’Neill In­sti­tute for Na­tion­al and Glob­al Health Law at George­town Law, told Al Jazeera. “I think that’s un­ques­tion­able.”

The CO­V­AX scheme ini­tial­ly aimed to achieve a 20 per­cent vac­ci­na­tion rate in all coun­tries in the world by the end of 2021. The World Health Or­ga­ni­za­tion lat­er set a tar­get of 40 per­cent vac­ci­na­tion rates in all coun­tries.

But just five na­tions in Africa are ex­pect­ed to hit the 40 per­cent goal, with the ma­jor­i­ty of coun­tries on the con­ti­nent falling far be­low the 20 per­cent mark.

As of No­vem­ber, the me­di­an vac­ci­na­tion rate of pop­u­la­tions in 92 coun­tries iden­ti­fied by CO­V­AX as the most in need of do­na­tions – the vast ma­jor­i­ty in sub-Sa­ha­ran Africa – was just 11 per­cent, ac­cord­ing to da­ta com­piled by COVID GAP, a mon­i­tor­ing ini­tia­tive launched by Duke Uni­ver­si­ty and the COVID Col­lab­o­ra­tive, a group­ing of pub­lic health ex­perts.

In con­trast, most high-in­come coun­tries have ful­ly vac­ci­nat­ed more than 50 per­cent of their pop­u­la­tions, and sev­er­al have ad­min­is­tered boost­er dos­es to more than 20 per­cent of their pop­u­la­tions, ac­cord­ing to Our World in Da­ta.

While vac­cine pro­duc­tion over the last year has scaled up to a lev­el where it is close to be­ing able to ad­dress the glob­al de­mand, the sit­u­a­tion re­mains pre­car­i­ous due in no small part to con­straints re­lat­ed to tech­nol­o­gy shar­ing, sup­ply chains, and the un­cer­tain­ty sur­round­ing the Omi­cron vari­ant, ex­perts and ad­vo­cates say.

In a No­vem­ber re­port, COVID GAP found that G7 coun­tries, the in­for­mal group­ing of the world’s most ad­vanced economies, and Eu­ro­pean Union coun­tries are pro­ject­ed to have in ex­cess of 834 mil­lion high-qual­i­ty vac­cine dos­es by the end of the year, even when ac­count­ing for pro­vid­ing boost­ers to 20 per­cent of the pop­u­la­tion and roll­outs to chil­dren.

Mean­while, when ac­count­ing for planned de­liv­er­ies, they pro­ject­ed the world would be about 650 mil­lion dos­es short of reach­ing the 40 per­cent goal by the end of the year.

The COVID Gap re­port was re­leased days be­fore the Omi­cron vari­ant was first iden­ti­fied in South­ern Africa. Its rapid spread around the world has seen gov­ern­ments push for faster and wider boost­er cam­paigns, with ear­ly stud­ies show­ing some jabs, no­tably the Pfiz­er and Mod­er­na mR­NA vac­cines, ap­pear to give high pro­tec­tion against Omi­cron in­fec­tion on­ly af­ter a boost­er has been ad­min­is­tered.

“We’re now at a point of hav­ing more than a bil­lion dos­es a month of vac­cines be­ing pro­duced, but it’s a slow trick­le still to get to low-in­come coun­tries and low­er mid­dle-in­come coun­tries,” Dr Kr­ish­na Udayaku­mar, found­ing di­rec­tor of the Duke Glob­al Health In­no­va­tion Cen­ter, told Al Jazeera. “So, we have not solved the sup­ply chal­lenge by any means, but we are clos­er to solv­ing it than we ever have been.”

But, he added, sup­ply is on­ly part of the is­sue.

“Look­ing for­ward to 2022 I think the en­tire game is re­al­ly go­ing to be about vac­ci­na­tion. So how do we get from air­ports to arms? How do we con­vert vac­cines to vac­ci­na­tions?” he said.

“I think we are woe­ful­ly un­der-re­sourced and un­der-pre­pared for that … There’s good progress to build from but much, much more work to do and fi­nanc­ing gaps in the bil­lions if not tens of bil­lions of dol­lars.”

 

‘We’re not there yet’

Oxfam activists with big head caricatures of G7 leaders pretend to fight over a COVID-19 vaccine during a protest on the sidelines of the G7 summit in Cornwall, Britain, on June 11, 2021 [File: Reuters/Peter Nicholls]

Oxfam activists with big head caricatures of G7 leaders pretend to fight over a COVID-19 vaccine during a protest on the sidelines of the G7 summit in Cornwall, Britain, on June 11, 2021 [File: Reuters/Peter Nicholls]

Vac­cine hoard­ing by wealthy coun­tries, stalls in de­vel­op­ment and ap­proval of some promis­ing vac­cines and oth­er pro­duc­tion hic­cups, no­tably a months-long halt on ex­ports from In­dia’s Serum In­sti­tute, a key CO­V­AX provider, led the ini­tia­tive to more than halve its tar­get of de­liv­er­ing two bil­lion dos­es in 2021, 1.3 bil­lion of which were to go to the 92 coun­tries con­sid­ered to have the high­est need.

As of De­cem­ber 17, CO­V­AX has shipped 610 mil­lion vac­cines of a tar­get­ed 800 mil­lion.

While the WHO has en­cour­aged do­na­tions to go through CO­V­AX, sev­er­al coun­tries have do­nat­ed both through the scheme and di­rect­ly to coun­tries, rais­ing ques­tions over whether geopol­i­tics has tak­en prece­dent over need.

Chi­na, which has been opaque in its vac­cine de­liv­er­ies, has gen­er­al­ly favoured do­na­tions and sales to coun­tries in Latin Amer­i­ca and Asia, ac­cord­ing to Bridge Bei­jing, which tracks Chi­nese do­na­tions. Coun­tries on the African con­ti­nent have re­ceived 113 mil­lion of the more than 1.2 bil­lion vac­cines Chi­na has dis­trib­uted in­ter­na­tion­al­ly, with 50 mil­lion of those go­ing to Mo­roc­co.

Ben­jamin Schreiber, who leads coun­try vac­cine readi­ness and de­liv­ery for UNICEF, which or­gan­is­es the in­ter­na­tion­al trans­port for CO­V­AX, said he ex­pects vac­cine sup­ply for low-in­come coun­tries to re­main lim­it­ed at least in­to the first few months of 2022, adding that vac­cine do­na­tions from wealthy coun­tries will re­main es­sen­tial.

“Peo­ple say sup­ply is solved. And now it’s all about de­mand. But it’s not. We’re not there yet,” he told Al Jazeera.

“We still have coun­tries that on­ly have a small frac­tion of their health fa­cil­i­ties pro­vid­ing vac­cines … We are far from yet hav­ing of­fered each per­son who needs the vac­cine a vac­cine.”

Be­yond sup­ply short­ages, Schreiber said dis­tri­b­u­tion in low-in­come coun­tries – hin­dered by weak health­care sys­tems, equip­ment short­ages, po­lit­i­cal con­straints and so­cial in­equity – re­mains a chal­lenge.

Amid an end-of-year surge in CO­V­AX de­liv­er­ies, Schreiber said many low-in­come coun­tries are strug­gling to find cold stor­age to keep the vac­cines, un­der­scor­ing the need for in­creased sup­port go­ing in­to 2022.

As of No­vem­ber 10, COVID GAP da­ta showed that the 92 high­est need coun­tries in the world were ad­min­is­ter­ing about 75 per­cent of their to­tal sup­plies, a phe­nom­e­non blamed on a mix of fac­tors in­clud­ing lit­tle pre-no­tice be­fore de­liv­er­ies, re­ceiv­ing do­nat­ed vac­cines that are close to their ex­pi­ra­tion date, dif­fi­cul­ty in de­liv­er­ing the vac­cines to high-need ar­eas, and hes­i­tan­cy among some pop­u­la­tions.

Glob­al health of­fi­cials have al­so warned of an im­pend­ing sy­ringe short­age.

Schreiber said UNICEF has iden­ti­fied about 20 coun­tries re­quir­ing an “all hands on deck” ap­proach in the com­ing year, adding that lead­ing fund­ing needs in­clude mon­ey to buy “cold chain” equip­ment es­sen­tial to stor­ing and trans­port­ing many vac­cines, as well as funds to train and re­cruit staff, de­vel­op in­fra­struc­ture, and aid pub­lic in­for­ma­tion cam­paigns.

In Oc­to­ber, the World Health Or­ga­ni­za­tion said it would need $23.4bn through next Sep­tem­ber in its broad cam­paign to ad­dress vac­cine in­equity, sup­port test­ing and treat­ment, and to achieve a 43 per­cent vac­ci­na­tion rate in the coun­tries with the great­est need.

That mon­ey must al­so go to­wards ad­dress­ing vac­cine hes­i­tan­cy in low-in­come coun­tries, sim­i­lar to that seen in the US and Eu­rope, said Dr William Moss, the ex­ec­u­tive di­rec­tor of the in­ter­nal vac­cine ac­cess cen­tre at Johns Hop­kins Bloomberg school.

“There’s cer­tain­ly mis­in­for­ma­tion, dis­in­for­ma­tion that has fu­elled vac­cine hes­i­tan­cy to lev­els, I would say, in sub-Sa­ha­ran Africa that we nev­er saw be­fore with child­hood vac­cines,” he told Al Jazeera.

How­ev­er, he not­ed, rais­ing funds for things like sup­port­ing health­care in­fra­struc­ture and pub­lic in­for­ma­tion cam­paigns has his­tor­i­cal­ly posed unique chal­lenges.

“That is a long­stand­ing com­mon prob­lem in these set­tings, where com­modi­ties are very easy to do­nate, whether it’s bed nets or vac­cine dos­es. You can count them. You can say we do­nat­ed all these,” he told Al Jazeera.

“It’s a lot hard­er to get funds do­nat­ed to in­vest in the pri­ma­ry health­care sys­tem, the vac­cine de­liv­ery chain, or the trans­porta­tion. All those are less ap­peal­ing to out­side donors and fun­ders, but they’re crit­i­cal­ly im­por­tant.”

 

‘In­equity 2.0’

A health worker administers a dose of the AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine in Bangkok, Thailand, on November 17, 2021. [Sakchai Lalit/AP Photo]

A health worker administers a dose of the AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine in Bangkok, Thailand, on November 17, 2021. [Sakchai Lalit/AP Photo]

Loom­ing over the in­ter­twined is­sues of vac­cine sup­ply and de­liv­ery is the Omi­cron vari­ant, a bet­ter un­der­stand­ing of which could prove an “in­flec­tion point” in the push for glob­al vac­cine eq­ui­ty, said Duke’s Dr Udayaku­mar.

If vac­cines need to be re­de­vel­oped, “then we’re go­ing to be back in­to a se­ri­ous­ly sup­ply-con­strained sce­nario”, he said. Mean­while, the in­creased need for boost­ers pos­es its own com­pli­ca­tions.

“We’re see­ing more boost­er dos­es per day in high-in­come coun­tries than we are first dos­es in low-in­come coun­tries,” he said.

In a re­cent in­ter­view with the As­so­ci­at­ed Press news agency, CEO of the Gavi vac­cine al­liance Seth Berkley said that an in­crease in peo­ple re­ceiv­ing boost­ers in wealthy coun­tries, and a short­en­ing of time­lines of when boost­ers are rec­om­mend­ed, “means that we could see in the fu­ture a sit­u­a­tion where those vac­cines are not avail­able for de­vel­op­ing coun­tries”.

“We al­so are be­gin­ning to see donors not want­i­ng to do­nate their dos­es as fast as they might have be­cause of the un­cer­tain­ty now of where we are,” he said.

The con­cerns have led to re­newed calls by rights groups for vac­cine man­u­fac­tur­ers to share tech­nol­o­gy more broad­ly.

Hu­man Rights Watch re­cent­ly high­light­ed a list iden­ti­fy­ing more than 100 com­pa­nies in Africa, Asia and Latin Amer­i­ca that health ex­perts say have the ca­pac­i­ty to make mR­NA vac­cines like those pro­duced by Pfiz­er and Mod­er­na, which have shown promis­ing re­sults – when boost­ers are ad­min­is­tered – in pro­tect­ing against Omi­cron in­fec­tion. Those vac­cines are cur­rent­ly on­ly man­u­fac­tured in Eu­rope and North Amer­i­ca.

George­town’s Gostin said boost­ing glob­al man­u­fac­tur­ing out­side of cur­rent hubs should be pri­ori­tised in the com­ing year.

“Low-in­come coun­tries al­ways know that do­na­tions come too lit­tle too late,” he said. “And they’re fed up of beg­ging hat in hand for char­i­ta­ble do­na­tions. They want the pow­er to make the vac­cines them­selves.”

COVID-19HealthUnited Nations


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