Global vaccine alliance GAVI to buy 500,000 doses of mpox vaccine
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[September 19, 2024]
By MONIKA PRONCZUK
DAKAR, Senegal (AP) — The global vaccine alliance Gavi will buy 500,000
doses of mpox vaccine to battle outbreaks of the disease in African
countries, the organization said on Wednesday.
The vaccine doses — manufactured by the Danish company Bavarian Nordic —
will be available this year, Gavi said, without giving any specific
dates.
Gavi said the full costs, including the transportation, delivery and
administration of the doses, amounting to $50 million, would be covered
by the group's First Response Fund, a new financial mechanism created in
June 2024.
Since the beginning of the year, there have been over 25,000 confirmed
mpox cases and 723 related deaths, the vast majority in Congo, and the
World Health Organization declared it a global health emergency.
So far Congo, the epicenter of the global health emergency, has received
only 250,000 vaccine doses, donated by the European Union and the United
States. The 250,000 doses are just a fraction of the 3 million doses
authorities have said are needed to end the mpox outbreak in the
country.
EU countries pledged to donate more than 500,000 others, but the
timeline for their delivery remained unclear.
Congo issued an emergency approval of the vaccine, which has already
been used in Europe and the United States in adults. Adults in Equateur,
South Kivu and Sankuru, the three most affected provinces, will be
vaccinated first, starting on Oct. 2, Cris Kacita Osako, coordinator of
Congo’s Monkeypox Response Committee, told The Associated Press. For the
moment, the rollout will be reserved for adults, with priority targeted
groups being those who have been in close contact with infected people
and sex workers.
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Family nurse practitioner Carol Ramsubhag-Carela prepares a syringe
with the Mpox vaccine before inoculating a patient at a vaccinations
site on Aug. 30, 2022, in the Brooklyn borough of New York. (AP
Photo/Jeenah Moon, File)
Gavi's announcement comes days after the World Health Organization said
it has granted its first authorization for the use of a vaccine against
mpox in adults, calling it an important step toward fighting the disease
in Africa. It made it possible for donors like Gavi and UNICEF to buy
it. But supplies are limited because there’s only a single manufacturer.
“This first (authorization) of a vaccine against mpox is an important
step in our fight against the disease, both in the context of the
current outbreaks in Africa and in future,” said WHO Director-General
Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus.
Last week, the Africa Center for Disease Control and Prevention and the
World Health Organization launched a continent-wide response plan to the
outbreak of mpox, three weeks after WHO declared outbreaks in 12 African
countries a global emergency.
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