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ACCESS TO COVID-19 VACCINES AND TESTING IN AFRICA: THE IMPORTANCE OF COVAX-NIGERIA AS A CASE STUDY
Afiliación
Diagnosis and Therapy of Infectious Diseases and Cancer. Rene Rachou Institute. Oswaldo Cruz Foundation. Belo Horizonte, MG, Brazil/ Department of Infectious Diseases. College of Veterinary Medicine. University of Georgia, Athens. Georgia, USA.
Department of Biological Sciences. University of Medical Sciences. Ondo, Ondo, Nigeria.
Department of Biological Sciences. University of Medical Sciences. Ondo, Ondo, Nigeria.
Resumen en ingles
Since pandemic declaration, the vulnerability of countries with serious economic challenges and limited health resources became evident. This vulnerability has been put to the test once again with the appearance of Omicron as another variant of concern. Although great efforts have been made to develop effective and safe vaccines, they need to be made available globally at an affordable price to all governments and distributed equitably to maximize immediate and long-term efforts to contain the virus and advance global public health. Potential sources of unfair allocation of COVID-19 vaccines are not hard to find. The COVID-19 Vaccine Global Access Facility (COVAX) has so far shipped over 406 million COVID-19 vaccines to 144 eligible participants. From that batches, about 115 million doses (28%) were allocated to 49 African countries. If proactive measures are not undertaken, Nigeria, pointed here as a case study, and Sub-Saharan Africa countries may not be self-reliant for COVID-19 vaccines. This report raises a discussion on the difficulties in accessing vaccines and diagnostics in sub-Saharan Africa, compared to high- and middle-income countries. Now more than ever, it is crucial to note that there is no overcoming a pandemic without coordinated action for actions that go beyond borders. The coordinated effort to raise vaccination rates in the African continent is not a humanitarian action aimed exclusively at Africa, but more than that, it is an effort for the benefit of global public health.
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