The U.S. Is Finally Donating Covid-19 Vaccines Abroad. We Need to Do More.

Here’s what must be done to get the world vaccinated

Craig Spencer MD MPH
Medium Coronavirus Blog

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Photo: Martin Sanchez/Unsplash

The pandemic is splitting in two. While the U.S. and other wealthy nations vaccinate their way out of the nightmare, Covid-19 is raging around the world. Globally, new case counts have risen for nine consecutive weeks — and are now at their highest levels since the start of the pandemic. Despite this, just 0.2% of all Covid vaccines are going to low-income countries.

That’s why the recent White House commitment to share 60 million doses of AstraZeneca’s Covid-19 vaccine came as welcome news.

For humanitarian, public health, and economic reasons, it’s imperative the U.S. does more to get the rest of the world vaccinated against Covid-19. Sharing the AstraZeneca vaccine doses is an important first step. The U.S. must do more.

How the U.S. has contributed so far

Before announcing the vaccine donation, the U.S. had already contributed to expanding global vaccine supplies and access. In February 2021, the U.S. committed $4 billion to Covax, the World Health Organization initiative to deliver Covid vaccines equitably to countries around the world.

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Craig Spencer MD MPH
Medium Coronavirus Blog

ER doctor | Ebola Survivor | Public Health Professor at Brown University | A Few Other Things