This illustration, created at the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), reveals ultrastructural
morphology exhibited by coronaviruses. Note the spikes that
adorn the outer surface of the virus, which impart the look of a
corona surrounding the virion, when viewed electron
microscopically. Golf, cricket, and rugby became the first major
sports to be affected by the new COVID-19 variant (B.1.1.529,
known as the Omicron variant) on Friday, prompting fears of
renewed travel restrictions and disrupted events just as they
were returning to normal nearly two years into the pandemic.
(Image courtesy of the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention)
From The Asian Reporter, V31, #12 (December 6, 2021),
pages 12 & 15.
Omicron brings COVID-19 vaccine inequity "home
to roost"
By Maria Cheng and Lori Hinnant
The Associated Press
LONDON — The emergence of the new omicron variant (B.1.1.529)
and the world’s desperate and likely futile attempts to keep it
at bay are reminders of what scientists have warned for months:
The coronavirus will thrive as long as vast parts of the world
lack vaccines.
The hoarding of limited COVID-19 shots by rich countries —
creating virtual vaccine deserts in many poorer ones — doesn’t
just mean risk for the parts of the world seeing shortages; it
threatens the entire globe.
That’s because the more the disease spreads among
unvaccinated populations, the more possibilities it has to
mutate and potentially become more dangerous, prolonging the
pandemic for everyone.
"The virus is a ruthless opportunist, and the inequity that
has characterized the global response has now come home to
roost," said Dr. Richard Hatchett, CEO of CEPI, one of the
groups behind the U.N.-backed COVAX shot-sharing initiative.
Perhaps nowhere is the inequality more evident than in
Africa, where under 7% of the population is vaccinated. South
African scientists alerted the World Health Organization (WHO)
to the new omicron variant, though it may never be clear where
it first originated. Researchers are now rushing to determine
whether it is more infectious or able to evade current vaccines.
COVAX was supposed to avoid such inequality — but instead the
initiative is woefully short of shots and has already abandoned
its initial goal of 2 billion doses.
Even to reach its scaled-back target of distributing 1.4
billion doses by the end of 2021, it must ship more than 25
million doses every day. Instead, it has averaged just over 4
million a day since the beginning of October, with some days
dipping below 1 million, according to an Associated Press
analysis of the shipments.
Shipments in recent days have ramped up, but nowhere near the
amount needed.
Meanwhile, richer nations often have a glut of shots, and
many are now offering boosters — something WHO has discouraged
because every booster is essentially a dose that is not going to
someone who’s never even gotten their first shot. Despite the
U.N. health agency’s appeal to countries to declare a moratorium
on booster shots until the end of the year, more than 60
countries are now administering them.
"What it highlights are the continuing and fundamental risks
to everyone associated with not seriously addressing the
inequalities still at play globally in the fight against disease
and poor health," said Dr. Osman Dar, director of the One Health
Project at the Chatham House think tank.
Anna Marriott, health policy manager for Oxfam, said COVAX
was limited from the outset after being pushed to the back of
the vaccine queue by rich countries.
"The COVAX team may be delivering as fast as they can, but
they can’t deliver vaccines they haven’t got," Marriott said.
Just 13% of vaccines COVAX contracted for and 12% of promised
donations have actually been delivered, according to
calculations by the International Monetary Fund from
mid-November. About a third of the vaccines dispensed by COVAX
have been donations, according to the vaccine alliance known as
Gavi, and the initiative is now partly a clearinghouse for those
donated doses, the very situation it was set up to avoid.
COVAX last month sent out a news release praising a European
Union pledge to ship 100 million vaccines to Africa by the end
of the year — but only 1/20 of that amount was actually on
planes.
Asked about the logistical challenges of distributing the
other 94 million doses in only six weeks, Aurelia Nguyen,
managing director of COVAX, maintained that arrangements "are in
place to move a vast number of doses between now and the end of
the year."
In a statement, she said the issue was ensuring that
"conditions are right on the ground for doses to be
administered."
In minutes released ahead of an executive meeting, Gavi
fretted that the perception that rich countries are dumping
older or lesser vaccines on poor countries could undermine the
whole project. In a joint statement with WHO and the African
Union, among others, it admonished that "the majority of the
donations to date have been ad hoc, provided with little notice
and short shelf lives."
Fury over dose dumping is already very real. In Malawi and
South Sudan, tens of thousands of out-of-date doses were
destroyed.
But it’s not just getting the vaccines into poorer countries
that’s a problem, according to some experts. COVAX is "falling
short on getting vaccines from the (airport) tarmac into
people’s arms," said Dr. Angela Wakhweya, senior director for
health equity and rights at CARE.
Authorities in Congo, for instance, returned their entire
COVAX shipment this summer when they realized they would not be
able to administer doses before they expired.
In a "risk management" report on COVAX, Gavi warned that
"poor absorption" of vaccines by developing countries could lead
to "wastage" of some doses. One problem is logistics — just
getting the doses in the right country at the right time. But
just as important is the ability of often underfunded national
health systems to distribute the shots where they’re most
needed, along with syringes and other necessary gear. A third
issue is persuading sometimes hesitant people to get the
vaccines.
World Health Organization director-general Tedros Adhanom
Ghebreyesus, however, has disputed distribution is a problem,
saying the only obstacle to immunization in poor countries is
supply.
Most COVAX doses distributed so far have been AstraZeneca’s
vaccine, a shot that has yet to be authorized in the U.S. and
whose botched rollout in Europe helped fuel anti-vaccine
sentiment when the vaccine was linked to rare blood clots. The
vaccines mostly used in the U.S. and much of Europe — made by
Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna — have only been available in tiny
amounts via COVAX.
The U.S., which blocked vaccine sales overseas and exports of
key ingredients for months, has donated 275 million doses in
all, more than any other country, but the vast majority of the
Biden administration’s 1.1 billion pledge has a deadline of
September 2022. The European Union, which has in general allowed
vaccines manufactured in the bloc to be sold anywhere in the
world, has actually delivered about a third of its 500 million
promised doses.
Efforts to ramp up global production beyond a select group of
manufacturers have stalled, which many activists and scientists
blame on pharmaceutical companies’ opposition to waive
intellectual property rights for the highly lucrative vaccines.
COVAX’s failure to deliver anywhere close to enough vaccines
has led some to wonder if it’s worth the effort to fight for the
shots, given that the pandemic has so far not devastated Africa
as many had initially feared — and has often been the worst in
richer nations. That’s a strategy few public health officials
would endorse.
"I think what Africa could do to really shame the world is to
stop asking for vaccines," said Christian Happi, a Nigerian
virologist who sat on the scientific advisory board of CEPI.
"The vaccines have not arrived, and anyways it may turn out that
we don’t need them as much as the west."
Hinnant reported from Paris. Associated Press writer Zeke
Miller contributed from Washington.