Variants winning the race against vaccines: WHO

Our Bureau Updated - July 08, 2021 at 09:08 PM.

Says this is due to inequitable vaccine production and distribution

FILE - In this Monday, May 24, 2021 file photo, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, Director General of the World Health Organization (WHO), speaks during a bilateral meeting with Swiss Interior and Health Minister Alain Berset before signing a BioHub Initiative with a global COVID-19 Pathogen repository in Spiez laboratory on the sideline of the opening of the 74th World Health Assembly, WHA, at the WHO headquarters, in Geneva, Switzerland. The head of the World Health Organization said at a press briefing on Friday, July 2 the world is currently in “a very dangerous period” of the COVID-19 pandemic, noting the more contagious delta variant is identified in nearly 100 countries. (Laurent Gillieron/Keystone via AP, File)

Even as the Delta variant is reported out of several countries, the World Health Organisation chief, Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, cautioned that the variants were currently winning the race against the vaccines because of inequitable vaccine production and distribution.

“The world is at a perilous point in this pandemic,” he said, pointing to the tragic milestone of four million deaths from Covid-19, which, he added, most likely underestimated the overall toll.

While some countries were planning booster-shot rollouts and abandoning public health social measures, he pointed out that far too many countries were seeing a sharp spike in cases and hospitalisations, “compounded by fast moving variants and shocking inequity in vaccination”. This was leading to an acute shortage of oxygen, treatments and deaths in parts of Africa, Asia and Latin America.

And the combination of factors also threatened the global economic recovery, he said, adding that it did not have to be this way. He called for countries to vaccinate 10 per cent of all its people by September and 40 per cent by the year-end. That would put the world on the path to vaccinating 70 per cent of its people by mid-2022.

Published on July 8, 2021 15:26