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Commentary: Omicron shows why we need to get low-income countries vaccinated

With global vaccination rates and vaccine donation pledges falling short of targets, former UK prime minister Gordon Brown calls for a global financing mechanism for pandemics.

Commentary: Omicron shows why we need to get low-income countries vaccinated
A man receives an AstraZeneca coronavirus vaccine in Abuja, Nigeria Friday, Nov 19, 2021. (AP Photo/Gbemiga Olamikan, File)

EDINBURGH: The damage caused by COVID-19 – exacerbated by the continued appearance of new variants, most recently Omicron – has been catastrophic.

More than five million lives worldwide have already been lost to COVID-19, and with confirmed cases on track to swell from 260 million today to 460 million by next autumn, the World Health Organization (WHO) estimates that five million more people may die from the disease in the coming months.

So, the World Health Assembly (WHA)'s task is nothing less than preventing the recurrence of such a tragedy. Specifically, the world needs an internationally binding agreement to prevent future infectious disease outbreaks from becoming pandemics.

As Tedros Ghebreyesus, the WHO’s director-general, has argued, a new agreement should be underpinned by a high-level commitment to health for all, grounded in equity and solidarity between countries.

Everyone, regardless of their wealth or income, should have fair access to what they need to maintain their health, and the international community should ensure the equitable use and distribution of available medical resources.

That will require a fully functioning global surveillance system, fast-tracking and sharing support in emergencies, and predictable finance.

Nothing illustrates more clearly the need for such an arrangement than the world’s collective failure to ensure the promised equitable distribution of COVID-19 vaccines.

Although brilliant science and a strong manufacturing effort mean that we will have produced 12 billion doses by the end of 2021 – enough to vaccinate every adult in the world – 95 per cent of adults in low-income countries remain unprotected. This is perhaps the greatest public policy failure of our times.

WIDENING GAP BETWEEN VACCINE HAVES AND HAVE-NOTS

The WHO’s internationally agreed target of vaccinating 40 per cent of the adult population of every country by December 2021 looks set to be missed by 82 countries. On current trends, it will take until next Easter to get close to 40 per cent, and even then, dozens of countries may fall short.

In fact, since the G7 summit in June, when leaders pledged that the whole world would be vaccinated against COVID-19 by 2022, the gap between the vaccine haves and have-nots has widened rather than diminished.

Soldier guards a consignment of COVAX vaccines at Kenya Jomo Kenyatta airport in Nairobi, Aug.6. 2021 (AP Photo/Brian Inganga, file)

In high-income countries, vaccination rates have risen from 40 per cent in June to roughly 74 per cent now, but they have increased at a glacial pace in low-income countries – from 1 per cent to less than 5 per cent.

For every adult now being inoculated in a low-income country, six adults in middle- and high-income countries are receiving their booster shots. And 73 per cent of African health workers remain unprotected.

True, important regional initiatives have taken steps to address the inequity gap.

The African Union’s vaccine-purchasing facility, the African Vaccine Acquisition Trust, has bought 400 million single-shot vaccine doses from Johnson & Johnson and, thanks to the Trust’s chair, Strive Masiyiwa, and the United States government, a further 110 million doses from Moderna, with 50 million to be delivered by March 2022.

But this is still not enough to meet the needs of Africa’s 1.3 billion people.

FALLING SHORT OF PLEDGES TO DONATE VACCINES

This inequality is not difficult to explain: A recent survey by Airfinity has shown that the world’s richest countries have bought 89 per cent of all COVID-19 vaccines, and currently retain control of 71 per cent of future deliveries.

The global north has fallen short of its pledges to donate vaccines to the global south.

The US has sent only 25 per cent of what it promised, while the European Union, the United Kingdom, and Canada have performed even worse, dispatching just 19 per cent, 11 per cent, and 5 per cent, respectively, of their pledged doses.

The COVID-19 Vaccine Global Access (COVAX) facility, which had hoped to distribute two billion vaccines by December, now expects to deliver just three-quarters of that amount.

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Such is the scale of vaccine hoarding in rich countries that Airfinity estimates that by the end of 2021, 100 million doses in the G20 stockpile will pass their expiration date and be wasted.

For G20 countries to hoard life-saving vaccines and deny them to the poorest countries, while allowing tens of millions of doses to go to waste, is a morally indefensible act of medical and social vandalism that should never be forgotten or forgiven.

Vaccine inequities show why more fundamental changes are needed in the international global public-health architecture of health decision-making.

Of course, among international organisations, only the Appellate Body of the World Trade Organization and the International Criminal Court, whose decisions are final, have the freedom and authority to make binding decisions that national governments are obliged to follow.

And because of that, these bodies are under assault from a coalition of anti-internationalists. Securing a binding treaty will not be easy.

File photo of empty vials of the Pfizer-BioNTech, Moderna and AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccines during a vaccine campaign in Germany, May 15, 2021(AP Photo/Matthias Schrader, File)

There is already a global health treaty to reduce tobacco demand and supply, and a 2011 agreement to ensure that the WHO can commandeer supplies of flu vaccine when needed.

But the legally binding international pact necessary to enable global health authorities to do more to prevent, detect, prepare for and control a pandemic has so far eluded us.

WHAT NEEDS TO BE DONE

At a time when new variants of COVID-19 are appearing, it is imperative that the special summit launches a process to develop a legally binding agreement under the auspices of the WHO constitution.

Moreover, governments can draw on several important recent reports.

These include one by a G20 high-level independent panel, co-chaired by Larry Summers, Tharman Shanmugaratnam, and Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala; the Mario Monti-led report to the WHO European Region; and the WHO review led by former Liberian President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf and former New Zealand Prime Minister Helen Clark.

A robust agreement should contain several key elements.

First, global health leaders must have more authority to develop and upgrade health surveillance.

Second, we need to build on the pioneering work of the Access to COVID-19 Tools Accelerator (ACT-A) and COVAX, and ensure equitable manufacturing and distribution of personal protective equipment, tests, treatments, and vaccines, so that all countries can protect themselves better against current and future pandemics.

Third, we need a global pandemic preparedness board.

But such arrangements will work only if leaders devise a sustainable financing mechanism to address the glaring global inequalities in health provision. Too often in times of global crises, we are reduced to passing the hat or convening ad hoc donor conferences.

Ideally, pandemic preparedness should be financed according to a burden-sharing formula that allocates the costs among countries with the greatest capacity to pay.

Even now, less than 20 per cent of the WHO’s budget is covered in this way. The eradication of smallpox in the 1960s and 1970s was historic not least because the final push was initiated by a cost-sharing agreement among the richest countries.

Failure to meet global COVID-19 vaccination targets could cost US$2.3 trillion in lost gross domestic product by 2025.

Given that prospect, the G20 high-level independent panel’s proposed US$10 billion annual budget for pandemic prevention and preparedness would offer one of the greatest returns on investment in history. But we must act now – and the WHA summit is the place to start.

Gordon Brown, a former prime minister of the United Kingdom, is United Nations Special Envoy for Global Education and Chair of the International Commission on Financing Global Education Opportunity. PROJECT SYNDICATE.

Source: Others/ep

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