“Besides the moral issue — people should not die if the technology is available somewhere else — you know, the technology should help humanity as a whole,” said Dr. Mariangela Simao, the WHO’s assistant director general for access to medicines, vaccines, and pharmaceuticals. “We can’t sort out this pandemic one country at a time. That’s the reality. We need to help countries move more together. Otherwise, we’re going to live with this virus much longer than we need to.”
WHO officials have set a goal to vaccinate at least 10% of the global population by the end of September, at least 40% by the end of this year and 70% by the middle of next year. Some nation’s across the world have yet to start their vaccination campaigns while wealthier countries like the U.S. and Israel have already fully vaccinated more than half of their populations.
Aylward said individuals in poorer nations who have a fever or other symptoms don’t have the testing supplies to know whether it’s from Covid or other diseases, including malaria, tuberculosis, pneumonia, and HIV. In addition to providing vaccine doses, Aylward said the funding will also cover Covid testing, oxygen treatments and masks.
Wealthy nations have spent trillions of dollars mitigating the impact of the pandemic, he said. “Your economy is telling you you have to vaccinate the world, and of course we didn’t listen,” he said.
The WHO previously said that it urgently needed $7.7 billion to run the ACT Accelerator, requesting an additional $3.8 billion at that time to purchase 760 million Covid vaccine doses for delivery next year, Reuters reported.
“This is the defining moment of our time,” Aylward said. “At some point, we will look back and that’s going to be the question, these defining moments, how did you act.”