COVID-19: Arrival time for second batch of vaccine unknown ― Africa CDC
COVID-19: Arrival time for second batch of
vaccine unknown ― Africa CDC
Many Africans who have received their first COVID-19 vaccine do not
know when they will get a second shot because deliveries are delayed, the
continent’s top public health official said on Thursday.
We cannot predict when the second doses will come and that is not good
for our vaccination programme,” John Nkengasong, Head of the Africa Centres for
Disease Control and Prevention (Africa CDC), told reporters. “Africa lags
behind most other regions in COVID-19 vaccinations, with just less than 14
million doses having been administered on the continent of 1.3 billion. “Ghana,
for example, has administered around 742,000 doses of the 815,000 shots it has
so far received and will run out by the end of next week. “Even if Ghana had
the money, they will not know where to go get the vaccine, that’s the
challenge,” Nkengasong said. So far, the majority of the vaccines available in
African countries have been delivered via the World Health Organisation-backed
COVAX facility.
COVAX aims to deliver 600 million shots to some 40 African countries
this year, enough to vaccinate 20 per cent of their populations. The majority
of those doses are AstraZeneca shots produced by the Serum Insitute of India.
However, as at March, India suspended its exports to meet rising domestic
demand amid a surge in COVID-19 cases. That has caused great uncertainty for
Africa’s vaccination rollout. “We are in a bind as a continent,” he added.
“Access to vaccines has been limited for us.” He said he hopes India, where new
infections have topped 200,000 a day, will lift its restriction as soon as
possible. People who have received their first jab are already benefiting from
some protection from the virus, he said, and he urged nations to use their
doses before they expire. (Reuters/NAN)
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