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WHO: Warns of ‘failure’ if rich countries do not increase vaccine donations

Rich countries need to give more vaccines against COVID-19 and follow the US in making their doses readily available so that a gap of 200 million doses caused by supply disruptions in India and production delays can be filled, he said. today his high-ranking official World Health Organization (WHO).

The World Health Organization has called on rich countries to donate excess doses of COVID-19 vaccine to poorer countries rather than to less vulnerable groups, such as children. They have so far donated 150 million doses of vaccine through him COVAX vaccine delivery mechanism. But WHO official Bruce Ellward said today that only a small portion of those doses would be available in the short term in June, July and August, when they could make a difference in slowing the rate of infection in the new coronavirus pandemic worldwide.

“We will need double that and it will have to be promoted,” he said, referring to the size of donations made by rich countries so far as the G7 health ministers meet in Oxford. “We will fail if we do not secure installments quickly,” he told a news conference at the UN headquarters in Geneva.

Eilward praised the US plan announced Thursday for the rapid distribution of 25 million doses of COVID-19 vaccine and encouraged other rich countries to follow suit. The WHO official estimated that disruptions in Indian vaccine exports and delays in receiving other vaccines resulted in a gap of about 200 million doses in the COVAX vaccine dispenser. The Serum Institute of India has diverted supplies of the AstraZeneca vaccine to the domestic market amid a devastating second wave of the COVID-19 epidemic in the country and is expected to lift these restrictions in the fourth quarter of this year, when other preparations are expected to be available. for COVAX.

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