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Senegal expects waste of 400,000 COVID-19 vaccines by year-end; Nigeria to destroy a million expired vaccines

Reuters

At least 200,000 COVID-19 vaccines have expired in Senegal without being used in the past two months and another 200,000 are set to expire at the end of December because demand is too slow, the head of its immunisation program said on Monday. 

African governments have been calling for more COVID-19 vaccines to help catch up with richer regions, where vaccine rollouts have been humming along for more than a year. 

NIGERIA TO DESTROY ONE MILLION EXPIRED COVID-19 VACCINES – OFFICIAL

Nigeria will destroy around one million expired COVID-19 vaccines, Faisal Shuaib, head of the National Primary Health Care Development Agency (NPHCDA), said on Monday, adding his agency was working with drug regulator NAFDAC to set a date for their destruction.

Nigeria’s health minister Osagie Ehanire said last week some COVID-19 doses donated by rich Western countries had a remaining shelf life of only weeks, adding to the country’s challenges in vaccinating its people. Fewer than four per cent of adults in Africa’s most populous nation of over 200 million have been fully vaccinated.

NIgeria Dr Faisal Shuaib

Dr Faisal Shuaib, ED/CEO National Primary Health Care Development Agency speaks during an interview with Reuters in Abuja, Nigeria, on 31st March. PICTURE: Reuters/Afolabi Sotunde.

Shuaib said the country had been accepting vaccines with short shelf lives from international donor nations in an attempt to use them quickly and provide some level of protection for Nigerian due to vaccine scarcity in the past. 

Shuaib said Nigeria will no longer accept vaccines with a short shelf life, citing a presidential committee decision.

Last week, Reuters reported that around one million COVID-19 vaccines were estimated to have expired in Nigeria last month without being used.

Still, the World Health Organization’s vaccine director Kate O’Brien said in a briefing on Thursday the proportion of wasted doses is smaller in countries receiving doses through COVAX than in many high-income countries.

– FELIX ONUAH, Abuja, Nigeria/Reuters

Yet, as the pace of supply has picked up in recent weeks some countries have struggled to keep pace. Logistical problems, the short shelf life of vaccines that arrive from donors, and vaccine hesitancy have all kept doses from reaching arms.

“The main problem is vaccine hesitation,” said Ousseynou Badiane, who is in charge of Senegal’s vaccine rollout. “The number of cases is decreasing. They ask: ‘why is it important to get vaccinated if the illness is not there now’?”

The majority of the expired doses were made by AstraZeneca and supplied via COVAX, the dose-sharing facility led by the GAVI vaccine alliance and the WHO, he said.

Low vaccination rates in Africa will help prolong the pandemic and raise the risk of new variants emerging, such as the Omicron variant that was first identified in southern Africa and Hong Kong and is now spreading in many countries.

“Not optimistic”
Senegal has recorded more than 74,000 COVID-19 infections and 1,886 deaths, far below the numbers seen in many nations hit harder by the virus. The pace of infection has dropped off since a third wave in July spurred a spike in vaccine demand. The country occasionally records no new daily cases. 

But apathy hurts the vaccination drive. Senegal has administered nearly two million doses of vaccines so far, Reuters data shows, enough to fully vaccinate only about 5.9 per cent of the population.

It is currently vaccinating between 1,000 and 2,000 people per day, Badiane told Reuters, down from 15,000 during the summer. At this pace, it cannot use all the vaccines it has.

“We are not optimistic” about using the other 200,000 doses before they expire at the end of the month, he said. “We don’t expect any demand increase before then.”

Part of the problem is the short shelf life of vaccines that arrive from donors that include the United States and China. Senegal refuses to take vaccines with a shelf life shorter than three months, but even that creates difficulties. 

Badiane hopes the government can introduce some kind of restrictions on the unvaccinated to drive up inoculation rates, including the use of a health pass as many other countries have done.

“Without the restriction, the population will not get vaccinated,” he said.

 

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