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Vaccines: Unicef ​​urges G7 and EU to give more than 150 million doses to Covax

2021-05-18T11:22:03.677Z


G7 countries and EU members would be able to donate more than 150 million doses of anti-Covid vaccines to underprivileged countries, to ...


G7 countries and EU members would be able to donate more than 150 million doses of anti-Covid vaccines to underprivileged countries, in an attempt to partially bridge the vaccine inequality in the face of the pandemic, says the Unicef ​​Monday May 17th.

To discover

  • Covid-19: vaccination as the only remedy

Read also: Covid-19: Covax weighs 5% of global vaccination

This number could be reached if the group of the seven richest countries in the world - whose leaders meet in June at the summit in England - and members of the European Union share only 20% of the stocks at their disposal in June, July and August, according to a study conducted by Airfinity, which specializes in particular in the analysis of scientific data and funded by the British branch of Unicef.

"And they could do it while still fulfilling their commitments in terms of vaccination of their own population"

, underlines Henrietta Fore, the director general of the UN agency.

Anti-Covid vaccines continue to be sorely lacking, for lack of sufficient production, and the international Covax system, set up to try to prevent rich countries from grabbing most of the precious doses, is far from the mark of doses he thought he could distribute.

In June, approximately 190 million doses will be missing from the Covax system - set up by the Vaccine Alliance (Gavi), the WHO but also the Cepi (Coalition for innovations in epidemic preparedness) - compared to initially planned volumes.

Unicef ​​- whose expertise in the field of vaccination is unparalleled - is responsible for distribution.

Read also: Why should children be vaccinated to do without barrier gestures

India was due to provide the vast majority of vaccine doses to Covax this year, but the explosion of the pandemic in the country has prompted authorities to ban exports of serum for use there. As a result, by the end of May, 140 million doses will be missed for Covax and another 50 million in June. The shortage of vaccines and the lack of funds further add to the difficulties. While waiting for more sustainable measures to significantly increase production,

"immediately sharing excess doses is a minimum, essential and emergency measure, which we need immediately

,

" said the

press release.

The United States has 60 million doses of AstraZeneca vaccine - a serum which after having often hit the headlines sometimes arouses mistrust - and has indicated that it wants to distribute them, France for its part has announced a donation of 500,000 doses to Covax, Sweden 1 million and Switzerland is considering giving as much.

For the time being, according to a study commissioned by Covax, a third of the populations of the richest countries have already had at least a first dose while for poor countries this represents only 0.2%.

A gap, which the boss of the WHO, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, considers unfair to the point that he asked countries on Friday to give up immunizing children and adolescents - less inclined so far to develop serious forms of Covid - to make their doses available to Covax.

Read also: Covid-19: the Covax Mechanism to achieve real equity in vaccines

For supporters of sharing, this is not just a moral imperative for poor countries to be able to immunize their health workers and their most vulnerable populations. A strong circulation of the virus anywhere, for lack of immunization, could give rise to variants that are more contagious, more deadly and perhaps resistant to current vaccines, nullifying the efforts already made.

"We are concerned that the surge in India is only a precursor of what will happen elsewhere," said

the statement.

"Cases are exploding and health systems are put to the test in countries close by like Nepal, Sri Lanka and the Maldives or far away like Argentina and Brazil"

, underlines Unicef.

The WHO Director General warned on Friday:

"The Covid-19 has already claimed the lives of more than 3.3 million people and at the rate things are going, the second year of the pandemic will be much deadlier than the first ”

.

Source: lefigaro

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