Africa’s top public health bodies have called for donated COVID-19 vaccines to come with a shelf life of three to six months so countries could plan their rollouts and avoid the situation of expiration.
Director of the Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), John Nkengasong, said 2.8 million doses of vaccines had expired on the continent, roughly 0.5 percent of the 572 million doses delivered to date. He said 10.4 percent of Africans were fully vaccinated.
“In terms of the 0.5 percent, let me be very clear, any dose of vaccine that expired pains me because that is a life that can be potentially saved,” Nkengasong noted in a news briefing on Thursday, January 20, 2022.
In a separate briefing, the World Health Organization Regional Director for Africa, Matshidiso Moeti, echoed Nkengasong’s call.
“Many countries indicate that they would like vaccines to be donated with at least three months of shelf life, if not more.”
Matshidiso Moeti – World Health Organization Regional Director for Africa
Nkengasong said the expired doses were mostly among those donated by individual countries or via the global vaccine-sharing scheme COVAX, and that they had arrived with “very short notice”.
In contrast, doses of the Johnson and Johnson vaccine acquired by African countries via a scheme organised by the 55-member African Union and delivered with a longer shelf life had not expired, he said.
He said some countries were now refusing to accept vaccines when they saw that the shelf life was only one or two months.
“They prefer not to receive those vaccines because it will create a narrative that vaccines have expired in their countries,” he said, without naming the countries. “Most countries are very sensitive to that now,” he added.
Logistical challenges
Nkengasong suggested that a focus on the continent this year should be the logistics of moving vaccines from the airports where they arrive at and where they are used.
“We’ve seen remarkable uptake of vaccines in settings where we engage the community,” he said. “We also have to be innovative and bring vaccines to the population and not only require that the population should go to where the vaccines are.”
Vaccinated Africans constitute10.4% of total population
Nkengasong said 10.4 percent of Africans were fully vaccinated, a percentage lagging far behind most other parts of the world.
Haru Mutasa, a local reporter in Harare, Zimbabwe held that transporting vaccines to rural populations have remained a challenge across the continent.
“In many parts of Africa, once you leave the cities and the towns, you have really poor roads and networks, so sometimes to give these vaccines to remote areas by road can take days, sometimes weeks,” Mutasa said.
“That’s why, when some of these vaccines arrive on the continent and they are about to expire, by the time they reach these people, these vaccines are actually of no use to anyone that’s why some of them have had to be thrown away,” she further added.
New Variants Emerging
Africa initially struggled to get COVID vaccine doses as rich countries snapped up limited supplies. Deliveries to the continent later picked up, but rollouts have been patchy.
Scientists have warned that low vaccination rates on the continent posed a risk in terms of new variants emerging, which, in turn, could prolong the pandemic globally.
According to Nkengasong, the Africa CDC, an agency of the African Union, planned to talk to US drugmaker Merck about obtaining supplies of its molnupiravir treatment pill for COVID-19, although talks with Pfizer about its Paxlovid medication were more advanced.
The agency had announced last week it was negotiating for supplies of Paxlovid, joining a global race for a drug seen as a potential game-changer in fighting the virus.
“We don’t have a preference to talk only to Pfizer and not Merck, it’s just that Pfizer has been more forthcoming with their engagement. We plan to engage both companies equally.”
John Nkengasong – Director of the Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
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