BRAZZAVILLE,
Republic of Congo
Nearly seven million COVID-19 vaccine doses have been administered in Africa targeting high-risk groups like healthcare workers, teachers and security officers, a World Health Organization (WHO) official said Thursday.
Matshidiso Moeti, WHO regional director for Africa said
immunization drive against the virus has gained steam in the continent amid a
quest to flatten the curve and reopen key economic sectors fully.
“Although Africa received vaccines late and in limited
quantities, a lot of ground has been covered in a short space of time,” Moeti
said in a statement issued in Nairobi.
“This is due to the continent’s vast experience in mass
vaccination campaigns and the determination of its leaders and people to
effectively curb COVID-19,” she added.
Statistics from WHO indicate that 38 African countries have
received more than 25 million COVID-19 vaccines under the COVAX facility and 30
of them have kicked off mass inoculation.
Moeti hailed determination by African countries to vaccinate
citizens against coronavirus amid rising caseload linked to a third wave and
circulation of new variants.
“Compared with countries in other regions that accessed vaccines
much earlier, the initial rollout phase in some countries has reached a far
higher number of people,” said Moeti.
Among Sub-Saharan African countries that have made strides in
mass immunization against coronavirus include Ghana which has administered
420,000 doses, covering over 60 percent of the targeted population in the virus
hotspot.
Morocco has administered more than 5.6 million vaccine doses in
the last seven weeks while in Angola, the jabs have reached over 49,000 people,
including 28,000 health care workers in the past week.
Moeti said COVID-19 vaccine rollout in Africa has been seamless
but cautioned that stockpiles were on the brink of exhaustion hence the need
for replenishment.
“Countries are clocking an impressive vaccination pace, but we
must ensure this speed does not slow down to a crawl. Additional supplies are
urgently required to narrow the gap between the vaccinated and the
unvaccinated,”she said.
Richard Mihigo, immunization and vaccine development program
coordinator at WHO Regional Office for Africa, said the continent has not recorded
significant adverse effects of COVID-19 vaccine doses on recipients.
“Precautionary measures that are informed by science and data
are in place to ensure that any side effect of the vaccine on the recipients is
reported promptly,” said Mihigo.
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