PAHO director welcomes US plan to share first tranche of 25 million COVID vaccine doses

PAHO director welcomes US plan to share first tranche of 25 million COVID vaccine doses
(FILE PHOTO)

Approx 6 million doses to be distributed for South and Central America and Caribbean

WASHINGTON, DC — Pan American Health Organization (PAHO) Director Carissa F Etienne yesterday thanked the United States Government for its commitment to a COVID-19 vaccine dose-sharing plan through COVAX.

“The actions announced today (yesterday) by the White House are a good step forward in our drive to get vaccines into the arms of our people in Latin America and the Caribbean,” Etienne said. “We are grateful for this dose-sharing initiative and encourage other countries with surplus vaccines to follow the lead of the United States.”

The United States said it plans to send the first tranche of 25 million doses, including 19 million procured through COVAX, to countries around the world. This includes “approximately six million for South and Central America to the following countries: Brazil, Argentina, Colombia, Costa Rica, Peru, Ecuador, Paraguay, Bolivia, Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras, Panama, Haiti and other Caribbean Community (CARICOM) countries, as well as the Dominican Republic”, the White House statement specified.

It also said: “The United States will share vaccines in our region and across our borders. We first made doses available to our closest neighbors — Canada and Mexico. Our dose-sharing approach prioritizes Latin American and the Caribbean on a per capita basis.”

Pan American Health Organization (PAHO) Director Dr Carissa F Etienne.

The PAHO director noted: “Effective vaccines are a beacon of hope in this crisis, and we must do all in our power to secure more doses for all nations in the Americas. Regional solidarity, including the donation of vaccine doses, will be key to get us through the current shortage of supply.

“This pandemic is far from over, and it is hitting Latin America and the Caribbean severely, affecting our health, our economies and entire societies. Yet only about four percent of our citizens have been fully vaccinated.

“The region is an epicenter for COVID-19 suffering. It should be an epicenter for vaccination, too. Our most urgent need continues to be additional vaccines, and as we thank the United States, I also want to repeat our call for other donations of vaccines to the countries of the Americas, which have a high epidemiological burden and not enough vaccines to reach a high proportion of their populations.”

So far, COVAX has delivered 18.9 million doses of vaccines to 31 countries in the Americas. PAHO and its Revolving Fund are working with governments, producers and other partners to ensure more vaccines can reach Latin America and the Caribbean, where these life-saving doses are urgently needed.