WHOs emergency programme director questions need for booster vaccines
The Irish doctor leading the World Health Organisationâs (WHOâs) response to Covid-19 has questioned the need for booster vaccinations in the wealthy world while impoverished countries remain without any protection against the virus.
Dr Mike Ryan, executive director of the WHOâs emergency programme, said the prospect of boosters being given to people who already had two shots raised ethical questions.
Developing and low-income countries had received only 0.3 per cent of vaccine supplies, he told an online forum at NUI Galway on Saturday.
âIt is a tragedy that we still have doctors and nurses in front-line situations in low-income countries who are not protected against Covid,â he said.
The pandemic has âstabilised at a really high worrying levelâ with the Delta variant by far the dominant strain. Between four and five million new Covid cases were still being recorded weekly â" one million of them in Europe â" and 70,000 died in the past week.
âThe idea that fit and healthy people who currently have two doses require a booster dose, at this point, we donât have the evidence to support that,â Dr Ryan said.
âApart from that, thereâs the ethical argument. How can we do that?â
While some people may need a third shot for health reasons, giving boosters to the healthy was akin to giving two life jackets to some people on the Titanic.
âYou can argue that two life jackets are better than one but what you need to recognise in isolating that argument â" hereâs two life jackets â" is that thereâs someone standing next door in a developing country who has no life jacket.
âWe have to trade that off. We have to look at equity in the context of that. We have to be very, very careful and prudent around the whole idea of boosters.â
Face masksIn a wide-ranging discussion with Prof Michael Kerin of NUI Galway, Dr Ryan said the wearing of face masks to help prevent the disease spreading âwill probably extend for a very, very long timeâ.
Asked about the risk of potential super spreader events, he said: âI still worry that we have to be very, very careful with large-scale indoor events where we have to have proper ventilation, proper space.â
Still, vaccinations meant the force of infections was becoming decoupled from hospitalisations, intensive care admissions and deaths.
âAll the studies show the vaccines remain very effective, though against the target that we designed,â he said.
âThe primary target of vaccines was to prevent hospitalisation, prevent severe disease and prevent deaths and if you measure the vaccines against that parameter theyâve been fantastically successful⦠In that sense that vaccine has done exactly what it said on the tin.â
But vaccines were less successful at preventing the disease from spreading, particularly as coronavirus evolves âbecoming fitter and fitterâ from human transmission.
âOur public health response is fighting against that natural evolutionary process â" and weâre right on that cusp now, where the virus has become much more efficient,â he said.
âOur vaccines are not as efficient at preventing mild infection and transmission. So you see that in countries with high levels of vaccination continue to see very high rates of disease transmission particularly amongst the unvaccinated.â
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