NAIROBI, Kenya
Kenya’s first batch of COVID-19 vaccines will arrive in the first week of March, the presidency said on Thursday, with healthcare workers, frontline workers and vulnerable population groups to be given priority.
“Cabinet
ratified the distribution framework for the vaccines; with first priority being
given to Health Care Workers, Front-line Workers including Security Personnel
and Teachers, vulnerable persons and groups and Hospitality Sector Workers,”
the presidency said in a press release.
The
statement did not reveal details of the type of vaccines or the quantity of the
doses that will arrive next month.
In
January, the health ministry said that it was seeking an extra 11 million doses
of COVID-19 vaccines, on top of 24 million already ordered that it planned to
source from major pharmaceutical manufacturers like Pfizer and Johnson &
Johnson.
It
said then that the extra doses will be acquired through the African Union’s
disease control and prevention body.
The
African Union has been trying to help its 55 member states buy more doses in a
push to immunize 60% of the continent’s 1.3 billion people over three years.
Last
week, its vaccine team said 270 million doses of AstraZeneca, Pfizer and
Johnson & Johnson vaccines secured for delivery this year had been taken
up.
On
Wednesday, Ghana became the first African country to secure vaccines through
the World Health Organization’s global vaccine-sharing scheme COVAX, acquiring
600,000 doses of the AstraZeneca/Oxford vaccine produced by the Serum Institute
of India.
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