When Africans asked for COVID shots, they didn't get them. Now they
don't want them
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[May 18, 2022]
By Edward McAllister and Cooper Inveen
DAKAR/ACCRA (Reuters) - It's noisy inside
the Mamprobi clinic in Accra as kids clamber over their mothers while
they wait to get their measles vaccines. Outside, an area reserved for
COVID-19 shots is empty. A health worker leans back in his chair and
scrolls on a tablet.
One woman, waiting to get her daughter inoculated, is fully aware of the
dangers of measles: the high fever, the rash, the risk to eyesight. But
COVID-19? She has never heard of a single case.
The perception that COVID-19 doesn't pose a significant threat is common
in Ghana's capital and elsewhere in Africa, whose youthful populace has
suffered a fraction of the casualties that have driven vaccine uptake in
places like Europe and America, where the disease tore through elderly
populations.
"I mean, Ghana has been spared up until now doing just what we're
doing," said Nana Kwaku Addo, a 28-year-old construction worker in
Accra. "I've heard people say it's common sense (to get vaccinated), but
what about all the other countries that have taken it and still put
people in lockdown."
Only 17% of Africa's 1.3 billion population is fully vaccinated against
COVID-19 - versus above 70% in some countries - in part because richer
nations hoarded supply last year, when global demand was greatest, to
the chagrin of African nations desperate for international supplies.
Now though, as doses finally arrive in force in the continent,
inoculation rates are falling. The number of shots administered dropped
35% in March, World Health Organization data shows, erasing a 23% rise
seen in February. People are less afraid now. Misinformation about
vaccines has festered.
"If we had gotten vaccines earlier, this kind of thing wouldn't happen
so often," Christina Odei, the COVID-19 team leader at the Mamprobi
clinic, said of the low uptake in Accra. "Initially everyone really
wanted it, but we didn't have the vaccines."
That worries public health specialists who say that leaving such a large
population unvaccinated increases the risk of new variants emerging on
the continent before spreading to regions such as Europe just as
governments there abandon mask mandates and travel restrictions.
In a sign of possible perils to come, cases of two Omicron subvariants
have shot up in recent weeks in South Africa, the continent's worst-hit
nation, prompting officials there to warn of a fifth wave of infections.
To boost uptake, countries are focusing on mobile vaccination drives, in
which teams visit communities and offer doses onsite.
However many African countries can't afford the vehicles, fuel, cool
boxes and salaries needed for a national campaign, according to more
than a dozen health officials, workers and experts across several
countries. Meanwhile, donor funding has been slow to arrive, they said.
Rahab Mwaniki, the Africa co-ordinator for the People's Vaccine Alliance
advocacy group, said it was a "big ask" for Africans to prioritise
getting COVID-19 vaccines to help protect others around the world when
infection rates at home were low.
"Many people say, 'you didn't help us'. They feel like the West never
really supported them," she added, stressing that Africans should still
get vaccinated to protect themselves and others from new variants.
REACHING OUT
Many African countries are long familiar with deadly diseases. Millions
fall ill each year with tuberculosis. Malaria kills hundreds of
thousands annually, mostly children under five. Ebola springs up
periodically in Democratic Republic of Congo.
West Africa is facing its worst food crisis on record driven by
conflict, drought, and the impact of the war in Ukraine on food prices.
For many people COVID-19, which carries a far greater risk of severe
illness and death for the elderly, is not the most pressing concern. The
median age in Africa is 20, the lowest of all regions, and about half
the 43 in Europe and 39 in North America, according to a Pew Research
Center analysis https://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2020/04/22/populations-skew-older-in-some-of-the-countries-hit-hard-by-covid-19
of U.N. data.
"Let me ask you one question," said Mawule, a businessman in Accra. "Is
COVID the biggest problem in Ghana right now? You think it's a bigger
problem than inflation, the way people suffer for fuel?"
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Sulayman Jalloh, an heath worker vaccinates a driver from the
Bundung garage during a mobile vaccination campaign against COVID-19
in Banjul, Gambia May 11, 2022. REUTERS/ Ngouda Dione
Now the continent has too many
COVID-19 vaccine doses. Vaccination sites lie empty; millions of
unused vials are piling up, and one of Africa's first COVID-19
vaccine producers is still waiting for an order.
At the Mamprobi clinic, health workers in bright yellow vests have
resorted to proactive measures.
They fan out across the busy market stalls and stores in the area,
one with a cool box slung over his shoulder containing COVID-19
vaccine shots, asking wary shoppers if they would like to receive an
injection.
After an hour toiling in the baking sun, the team had administered
just four doses.
NO MONEY, NO JINGLES
To boost uptake, countries including Ghana, Gambia, Sierra Leone and
Kenya are focusing on mobile vaccination campaigns that visit
communities. But finances are stretched.
Misinformation is tough to unglue on a continent
where big pharmaceutical companies have in the past run dubious
clinical trials resulting in deaths. Health workers say they need
funds to counter false rumours.
Ghana, one of Africa's most developed economies and one applauded
for its early inoculation surge, has a funding gap of $30 million to
carry out another campaign, according to the World Bank. Irregular
power supply jeopardises the vaccine cold chain. Doses expire.
"We don't have any problem with the number of vaccines anymore. It's
only a problem with uptake and the money to get those vaccines out
to people," said Joseph Dwomor Ankrah, who manages the country's
COVID-19 vaccine distribution.
Niger, where only 6% of the population is fully vaccinated, lacks
enough cold storage for vaccines in its vast rural areas, or
motorbikes to distribute them, according to the World Bank.
There have been some successes; Ethiopia has vaccinated 15 million
people in a nationwide push since mid-February, for example.
Yet uptake is "abysmally low" in the tiny state of Gambia, said
Mustapha Bittaye, director of health services.
The African Union wants Gambia to take delivery of more than 200,000
doses, but the country is still working through an old batch and
doesn't need more, Bittaye said.
In Zambia, where coverage is 11%, officials are planning outreach
campaigns but worry they won't be able to cover the cost of feeding
doctors working far from home or pay for their transport.
In Sierra Leone, where 14% of the population is fully vaccinated,
radio stations sometimes refuse to broadcast the government's
pro-vaccine messages because of unpaid invoices, said Solomon Jamiru,
the country's COVID-19 spokesman
A World Bank fund for vaccine purchases and rollouts has sent $3.6
billion to sub-Saharan Africa. Of that, only $520 million has been
spent. Amit Dar, the bank's human development director for Eastern
and Southern Africa, said outdated health systems had struggled to
absorb the funding.
Health experts say more funding was needed at the start of the
pandemic for logistics and training.
"The fact that we didn't invest heavily a year or 18 months ago is a
big part of what we are seeing now," said Emily Janoch, a senior
director at aid group Care USA. "These are the consequences of
earlier failures."
(Reporting by Edward McAllister in Dakar and Cooper Inveen in Accra;
Additional reporting by Jennifer Rigby and Josephine Mason in
London; Editing by Alexandra Zavis and Pravin Char)
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