Vaccine inequity: Inside the cutthroat race to secure doses
Inequity is everywhere: Inoculations go begging in
It’s like a famine in which “the richest guys grab the baker,” said
In fact, European and American officials deeply involved in bankrolling and distributing the vaccines against coronavirus have told The Associated Press there was no thought of how to handle the situation globally. Instead, they jostled for their own domestic use.
But there are more specific reasons why vaccines have and have not reached the haves and have-nots.
COVID-19 unexpectedly devastated wealthy countries first — and some of them were among the few places that make the vaccines. Export restrictions kept the doses within their borders.
There was a global purchase plan to provide vaccines for poorer countries, but it was so flawed and underfunded that it couldn’t compete in the cutthroat competition to buy. Intellectual property rights vied with global public health for priority. Rich countries expanded vaccinations to younger and younger people, ignored the repeated pleas of health officials to donate their doses instead and debated booster shots - – even as poor countries couldn’t vaccinate the most susceptible.
The disparity was in some ways inevitable; wealthy nations expected a return on their investment of taxpayer money. But the scale of the inequity, the stockpiling of unused vaccines, the lack of a viable global plan to solve a global problem has shocked health officials, though it wasn’t the first time.
“This was a deliberate global architecture of unfairness,” Masiyiwa told a
“We have no access to vaccines either as donations or available for us to purchase. Am I surprised? No, because this is where we were with the HIV pandemic. Eight years after therapeutics were available in the West, we did not receive them and we lost 10 million people.”
“It’s simple math,” he said. “We have no access. We have no vaccine miracle.”
The
For years, the
On
But that same day, the
CEPI quickly invested in two promising coronavirus vaccines being developed by
“We said very early on that it would be important to have a platform where all countries could draw vaccines from, where there’s accountability and transparency,” said
Happi said officials never expected the pandemic would strike first and hardest in
Global health experts would soon come to realize that rich countries “could sign a piece of paper saying they believe in equity, but as soon as the chips are down, they will do whatever they want,” he said.
On
By then, the disease was tearing through the elderly populations of
On
The race to make and secure vaccines was on, and
But as grim as the situation was, all those countries had a major advantage: They were home to the pharmaceutical companies with the most promising vaccine candidates, the world’s most advanced production facilities, and the money to fund both.
On
“We were frankly focused on getting this as fast as humanly possible. If I had to redo it, I probably should have voiced more of a global dimension,” said Slaoui. “The operation had focused, which was frankly also part of its success, on staying out of the politics and making the vaccines.”
The idea of including clauses to ensure that vaccines would go to anyone besides Americans wasn't even considered.
At the same time, the
But it also meant those materials would run low in much of the rest of the world. The
Operation Warp Speed supercharged the global race to secure vaccines, but it would still take another two weeks until COVAX — the COVID-19 Vaccines Global Access Facility — was formally announced as the entity to ensure equity, with the
COVAX had the backing of the
“Operation Warp Speed signed the first public deals and that started a chain reaction,” said
Some involved in the COVAX project flagged
India’s government had blocked exports of protective gear, but many global health authorities
A separate plan put forward by the government of
On the global scale, the one organization that could have pushed for more technology sharing was the
Instead,
In
But in retrospect, Slaoui said, given the sheer amount of taxpayer money involved, each time they signed new contracts the
“From a geopolitical standpoint, it’s critical that they do that,” he said.
Nowhere was the situation more dire than
Five months later, contemplating the plight of a continent that gets 99% of its vaccines from abroad, Mihigo adds a rueful footnote: “One of the lessons we learned from this pandemic is how badly prepared we were in vaccine production in the region and how dependent we were on imports.”
Those imports have only barely begun to materialize — and they are insufficient to meet even the limited goals of the COVAX initiative to vaccinate at least 20% of the population of 92 low- and middle-income countries by the end of this year.
From the start, the coalition of organizations that created COVAX found themselves fighting the last war.
The plan was designed as an international pool to spur demand for vaccines and treatment of diseases with a relatively small global footprint, said
Something like Ebola. But the coronavirus pandemic looked nothing like an Ebola outbreak.
“That itself was a structural weakness,” she said.
Although the
Meanwhile, governments competed to secure contracts for vaccines by the hundreds of millions.
On
The Western companies with the most promising doses, including
COVAX pleaded for cash to do the same. Instead, it got pledges.
“As time passed and it became clear which vaccine candidates were going to be the leading contenders and which were most likely to succeed, the governments that had resources went and bought the supplies,” CEPI chief executive Dr.
Months later, when COVAX finally had the money to sign deals for global supplies, Hatchett acknowledged they were at the end of the line.
The lack of capital available to vaccine makers to boost their capacity outside the small number of existing manufacturing hubs was also “a lost opportunity,” Hatchett said.
“We approached the international financing institutions, including the
COVAX missed its own goal of beginning vaccinations in poor countries at the same time as rich ones. It finally delivered vaccines on
By that date, 27% of the population in
And pharmaceutical plants were beginning to crumble under the promises they’d made.
In
So COVAX had to hope that the
The mRNA vaccines are widely considered a scientific and manufacturing triumph — and a risky bet. Never before approved for use against any disease, they are now considered a hugely promising medical innovation and a potential gamechanger against infection.
But by the time it was clear the mRNA doses were a viable alternative, even in poor countries with limited cold chain, the available supply had been snapped up in
According to the People’s
For Byanyima, of UNAIDS, this is a travesty and a sign that the world has learned little in the decades since the AIDS pandemic was brought under control in
COVAX has delivered only 107 million doses, and now is forced to rely upon uncertain donations from countries that may prefer to donate directly to the needy, so they can receive the credit.
A readout from its June board meeting slipped in an acknowledgement that it needed to better interpret and respond to market conditions and “the reality that a higher risk appetite is needed in a pandemic setting.”
For the pharmaceutical industry, mRNA is the ultimate confirmation that hard work and risk-taking is rewarded. And those companies keep tight hold on the keys to their successful vaccines.
When
Many public health officials have pushed for technology transfer during the pandemic. Initially resistant, the
Dr.
“We had a mandate to buy vaccines, not to talk about intellectual property, ” Auer said.
“The global community should have had this discussion back in 2020 but that didn’t happen,” he said. “Maybe we should have done it last year, but now it’s too late. It is spilled milk.”
CEPI includes equity clauses in the vaccines that it invests in, among them the successful
A separate push to lift intellectual property restrictions on vaccines and medicines has also gone nowhere in the
And
“A lot of these multinational organizations, these plans, these coalitions, they don’t have teeth to enforce what they think is a fair and equitable way to distribute resources,” said Dr.
“If it’s going to be a commodity, we’re going to keep walking down this road every time we have something like this,” she said.
And if it is all going to rely on the generosity of rich countries, a lot of people are going to die. Four million have died already.
In all, at the recent
A close look at the G-7 promises of donations shows that most aren't expected to be delivered until well into 2022. The Biden administration fell short on its pledge to send 80 million doses abroad by the end of June: By mid-July, at least 44 million doses had been sent, including 2.5 million to
Oceans away from the deprivation of the developing world, 7-year-old
Wearing a Spider-Man mask, Russell said he longs for a vacation trip to the water park and then a return to school without having to wear masks and stay at arms’ length from his friends.
“Both me and my wife are already vaccinated,” said his father, Adam, “and so the sooner I can get them vaccinated and to feel comfortable being outside, not having to wear a mask, I thought the easiest way to get it is to go through the trial.”
Scientists agree that children are at low risk from COVID-19. But that hasn't stopped richer countries from stockpiling precious vaccine supplies to inoculate the young, even as poor countries have few or no shots to give.
A recent meeting of WHO’s vaccine allocation group disbanded with nothing accomplished, because there was no vaccine to allocate. “Zero doses of
“Every single one of our suppliers is unable to supply during this period because others are making demands on those products, others
Both Trump and Biden administration officials reject the notion that the
“We had a responsibility to what I say, ‘put on our own oxygen masks before helping others,’”
But a plummeting jet takes all passengers with it, whether or not they are wearing masks. And the failure to provide vaccines across the globe ensures that COVID-19 will continue to spread, and mutate, and sicken, and kill.
“It speaks volumes about where we are as a globe when you have the source of decision-making sitting with very few people
Follow AP’s pandemic coverage at https://apnews.com/hub/coronavirus-pandemic and https://apnews.com/hub/coronavirus-vaccine
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