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Nigerians take up COVID shots after expired doses destroyed
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[January 28, 2022]
By Abraham Archiga
ABUJA, January 28 (Reuters) - Abubakar
Yusuf, an informal Nigerian trader, said he was scared to get a COVID-19
shot after hearing the country had stocks of expired vaccines. That
changed, however, when health authorities destroyed more than a million
expired doses last month.
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Nigeria's vaccine rollout has slowly gained pace since then as
public confidence increases and the government has assured citizens
they will not receive expired doses.
Nigerians like Yusuf were rattled by reports of vaccines with
looming expiry dates and worried about whether the shots they would
get were safe and effective, complicating the government's efforts
to get as many shots into arms as possible.
Nigeria, like other African countries, initially struggled to get
doses as rich nations snapped up limited supplies. Deliveries later
picked up, but some shots donated by individual countries or via the
global vaccine-sharing scheme COVAX arrived with a very short shelf
life, leading them to expire.
Nigeria has said it will no longer accept vaccines close to expiry.
The daily vaccine uptake doubled to 200,000 doses in December and
January, Faisal Shuaib, head of the National Primary Health Care
Development Agency said.
"We've been scared before, seriously," Yusuf told Reuters after
getting an AstraZeneca dose at a market in Abuja. "But the way
people have been taking it [the vaccine], they are well, they are
doing their normal business... so we decided to take it."
In December, Nigeria destroyed more than a million doses of expired
AstraZeneca vaccines as it sought to assure a wary public that they
had been taken out of circulation.
That seemed to have convinced Gabriel Allesiloye to get a shot.
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"It's good for government to discard those
ones... and they have done so... it is good for
us to take it," said Allesiloye, who described
himself as a Christian evangelist, after getting
his COVID-19 shot at the Abuja market.
John Nkengasong, director of the Africa Centres for Disease Control
and Prevention, Africa's top public health body, told a virtual
media briefing on Thursday that news of expired vaccines had created
"some kind of hesitation" among sceptical citizens.
He said last week that roughly 0.5% of the 572 million doses
delivered to date had expired. Other African countries have also
destroyed them like Nigeria.
Africa's public health bodies have now called for donated vaccines
to come with a shelf life of three to six months.
Nkengasong noted more African countries were recording increases in
the number of people being vaccinated as communication and community
engagement improved, he said.
Around 2.6% of Nigeria's population have been fully vaccinated,
while 14 million received a first dose.
(Additional reporting by Camillus Eboh in Abuja and James Macharia
in Johannesburg, Writing by MacDonald Dzirutwe, Editing by Alexandra
Hudson)
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