NAIROBI, Kenya
Kenya is unable to afford Covid-19 vaccine at Sh300 per dose, the subsidised price set by one appointed distributor from India.
The country is among 92 other
poor nations that will need to be supported through a further reduction of the
price.
At least nine candidate vaccines,
if approved, will be distributed around the world at highly reduced prices
through an initiative led by Gavi, an alliance based in Geneva that helps poor
countries access vaccines.
The initiative, currently backed
by 172 countries, will ensure all of them get the Covid-19 vaccines as early as
possible even if they cannot afford.
Eighty of those countries have
said they can self-finance and subsidise the cost further for the poorer
ones.
In a list provided by Gavi, in
Africa, only South Africa and Botswana have publicly said they can afford the
Sh300 per dose.
Kenya is among the
92 developing countries that will need support to buy millions of doses
for their people.
“These countries will have
limited resources to access future Covid-19 vaccines: it is our duty to support
them," Gavi board chairman Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala said in a statement
recently.
The University of Oxford vaccine
candidate would need to be administered at two doses for about a year-long
protection.
Gavi has now asked countries that
can pay to confirm by August 31 and make full payments by October 9 to
enable manufacturers to prepare.
The World Health
Organization is currently tracking more than 170 candidate
vaccines, according to its latest update.
None has been licensed but eight
front-runners are in the final phase three evaluation.
The list does not feature Sputnik
V, the world's first coronavirus vaccine produced by Russia, which Western
scientists say has not been adequately tested.
Gavi said it has so far
identified nine candidates to be financed through its Covid-19 Vaccine Global
Access Facility (Covax Facility).
These are produced by
AstraZeneca/University of Oxford, UK (Phase III), USA's Inovio (phase II),
Novavax (Phase II), Moderna (Phase III) and France's Institut Pasteur
(preclinical).
Others are CureVac of Germany
(Phase I), University of Queensland, Australia (Phase I), University of Hong
Kong (Preclinical), and Clover Biopharmaceuticals, China (Phase I).
Covax is co-led by Gavi, the
Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations (Cepi), and WHO – in
partnership with developed and developing country vaccine manufacturers.
It is the only global initiative
that is working with governments and manufacturers to ensure Covid-19 vaccines
are available worldwide to both high-and low-income countries.
A collaboration between one
manufacturer, the Serum Institute of India (SII), Gavi and the Bill &
Melinda Gates Foundation announced earlier this month will ensure up
to 100 million doses of AstraZeneca or Novavax’s candidate vaccines, if
successful, will be available to poor countries through the Covax Facility at
just US$3 (Sh300) per dose.
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