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World better positioned against mpox than for Covid-19: Vaccine alliance

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GENEVA – Lessons learned from the Covid-19 pandemic have left the world in a much better position to tackle the current mpox epidemic raging in Africa, according to the Gavi vaccine alliance.

The Covid-19 catastrophe brought with it “important learnings, and those learnings were drawn upon”, said Gavi chief Sania Nishtar.

“Those learnings cascaded into specific instruments that are now coming into play” against mpox, the former Pakistani health minister told AFP in an interview this week.

When Covid-19 emerged in early 2020 and quickly began its deadly rampage around the globe, it revealed how completely unprepared the international community was to face such a global health crisis.

It also shone a light on glaring global vaccine inequity, as wealthy countries snapped up most doses, leaving Africa far behind.

Countries are still struggling to agree on a new pandemic treaty that could ensure the world is better prepared next time.

But Gavi, which works to swell vaccine access in poorer countries, has not waited for a global agreement to put in place measures to better position it to respond to emergencies, Ms Nishtar said.

The organisation in June set up a US$500 million (S$648 million) First Response Fund, designed to make cash rapidly available for vaccines during health emergencies.

‘Responsive’

“The learnings of Covid-19 were that when the emergency hits, there wasn’t money available,” said Ms Nishtar, who became the first woman to lead Gavi when she took the reins in March.

Gavi announced its first use of the fund on Sept 18, as it entered a deal with Danish drugmaker Bavarian Nordic to secure 500,000 doses of its MVA-BN mpox vaccine for use in African countries hit by the epidemic.

“We’re drawing up to US$50 million from the First Response Fund,” Ms Nishtar said, adding that the money would partially be used to cover the cost of the doses, and partially for overhead costs including for delivery and logistics.

“We’re doing all we can to make sure that we can be as responsive and as quick as possible,” she said.

Mpox, previously known as monkeypox, is caused by a virus transmitted to humans by infected animals but can also be passed from human to human through close physical contact.

It causes fever, muscular aches and large boil-like skin lesions, and can be deadly in some cases.

The World Health Organisation declared an international emergency over mpox in August, concerned by the surge in cases of the new Clade 1b strain in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), that spread to nearby countries.

Between January and the end of August, DRC had recorded nearly 22,000 cases and more than 700 deaths linked to the virus.



World better positioned against mpox than for Covid-19: Vaccine alliance

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