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Home > News > World News > Article > Vaccine crisis a scandalous inequity promoting Covid pandemic WHO

Vaccine crisis a scandalous inequity promoting Covid pandemic: WHO

Updated on: 25 May,2021 11:11 AM IST  |  Geneva
IANS |

If the vaccines had been distributed equitably, the doses "administered globally so far would have been enough to cover all health workers and older people".

Vaccine crisis a scandalous inequity promoting Covid pandemic: WHO

WHO Chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus. Pic/AFP

The ongoing vaccine crisis is a "scandalous inequity" that is perpetuating the Covid-19 pandemic, World Health Organisation (WHO) Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said on Monday. In his address at the WHO's 74th World Health Assembly, taking place online from May 24 to June 1, he said: "More than 75 per cent of all vaccines have been administered in just 10 countries." The fate of the rest of the world is controlled by a small group of countries that are making and buying the majority of the vaccines, he added..


If the vaccines had been distributed equitably, the doses "administered globally so far would have been enough to cover all health workers and older people". "We could have been in a much better situation," he lamented. Further, Ghebreyesus stated that countries vaccinating children and other low-risk groups now "do so at the expense of health workers and high-risk groups in other countries."



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While 72 million doses have been shipped to 125 countries through COVAX, they are sufficient for barely 1 per cent of the combined population of those countries. Ghebreyesus called on member states to support vaccination of at least 10 per cent of the population of every country by September, and at least 30 per cent by the end of the year. "We must be very clear: the pandemic is not over, and it will not be over until and unless transmission is controlled in every last country," he said.

The global health body chief urged all countries to increase surveillance, testing, sequencing, and sharing information; surge supplies needed to protect health workers; fight misinformation and disinformation; empower people and communities to play their part; support businesses and workplaces to take steps to open up safely, where appropriate; implement national vaccination strategies, vaccinate those most at risk, and donate vaccines to COVAX.

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