•      Tue Nov 26 2024
Logo

Six African countries to receive mRNA vaccine technology



vaccine
FILE – This September 2020 photo provided by Johnson & Johnson shows a single-dose COVID-19 vaccine being developed by the company. A late-stage study of Johnson & Johnson’s COVID-19 vaccine candidate has been paused while the company investigates whether a study participant’s “unexplained illness” is related to the shot, the company announced Monday, Oct. 12, 2020. (Cheryl Gerber/Courtesy of Johnson & Johnson via AP, File)

The first African countries selected to receive the technology necessary to produce mRNA vaccines against COVID19 are Egypt, Kenya, Nigeria, Senegal, South Africa and Tunisia, a summit meeting of European Union and African Union nations heard on Friday.

The six countries have been chosen to build vaccine production factories as part of a bid the World Health Organization launched last year to replicate what are believed to be the most effective licensed shots against COVID19.

Africa currently produces just 1% of coronavirus vaccines. According to WHO figures, only 11% of the population in Africa is fully vaccinated, compared with the global average of about 50%.

WHO SecretaryGeneral Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus told the Brussels summit meeting that although more than 10 billion doses of COVID19 vaccines have been administered globally, billions of people still remain unvaccinated.

“The tragedy, of course, is that billions of people are yet to benefit from these lifesaving tools, he said, calling for an urgent increase of local production of shots in poor countries.

It is the first time WHO has supported efforts to reverseengineer a commerciallysold vaccine, making an end run around the pharmaceutical industry that has largely prioritized supplying rich countries over poor in both sales and manufacturing.

The U.N.backed effort known as COVAX to distribute COVID19 vaccines fairly to lowerincome countries has missed numerous targets and only about 10% of people in poorer countries have received at least one dose.

Earlier this year, the Cape Town company attempting to replicate Moderna Inc.’s COVID19 shot said it had successfully made a candidate vaccine that will soon start laboratory testing. Both Moderna and PfizerBioNTech, makers of the two authorized mRNA COVID19 vaccines, have declined to share their vaccine recipe or technological knowhow with WHO and its partners.

Doctors Without Borders welcomed the announcement, but cautioned that much more work was needed to recreate the mRNA vaccines and called for Moderna to help. Kate Stegeman, the medical charity’s advocacy coordinator, said it would still take considerable time for African scientists to make Moderna’s highly technical vaccine, including creating a heatstable version and to perform clinical trials.

“The fastest way to start vaccine production in African countries and other regions with limited vaccine production is still through full and transparent transfer of vaccine knowhow of alreadyapproved mRNA technologies to able companies,” Stegeman said.

She pointed to research showing that there are more than 100 manufacturers in Asia, Africa and Latin America that could make the vaccines.

Earlier this week, BioNTech said that it would start sending shipping containersized factories to African countries to help them start making their COVID19 vaccine with European staff, in what some activists called a “neocolonial stunt” to maintain control.

Although Moderna pledged not to go after companies for infringing on its coronavirus vaccine patents, it recently filed claims for several broad patents in South Africa. The move raised fears the company will begin enforcing patents while COVID19 is still spreading in Africa, undermining efforts to build African vaccine production.

In addition to supporting the transfer of vaccine technology, the EU has been exporting millions of COVID19 vaccine doses to Africa. The 27nation bloc said it has supplied Africa with almost 145 million doses, with a goal of reaching at least 450 million shots by the summer.

South African President Cyril Ramaphosa said Fridays announcement “means mutual respect, mutual recognition of what African nations can contribute as well as bringing in investment to the continent.

But Ramaphosa repeated his call for lifting patent protections on coronavirus vaccines that he believes would allow more manufacturers to produce the shots. The EU remains opposed to the move, favoring instead individual deals with companies for technology transfers and knowhow.

The decision is up to the 164member World Trade Organization. If just one country votes against a patent protection waiver, the proposal will fail.

Finlands Prime Minister Sanna Marin said talks on patents should continue because expanding vaccinations globally is key.

“Otherwise we will see more variants and the next variant might be even (more) dangerous than (the ones that) we have seen,” said Marin.

European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen said officials from both continents will keep working at reaching a common position and will meet again later this Spring.

“The goal is clear, we have to deliver, she said. “Europe wants to remain Africas first partner, a loyal partner, and we are moving right now from words to action.” AP