Amid a second wave of the coronavirus pandemic, hospitals in Colombia are getting overrun and havoc is reigning across the country, reported CNN. The publication claimed that overworked healthcare professionals are feeling the crunch as the government recently announced its vaccination campaign will not start until the end of February.
Meanwhile, Reuters had reported that Colombia's plan to vaccinate over 35 million people against the coronavirus this year could face delays, President Ivan Duque said, even as he reiterated his confidence pharmaceutical companies will meet delivery deadlines.The country said last week it had secured 61.5 million vaccine doses from a raft of pharmaceutical companies and via the World Health Organisation-backed COVAX scheme. It plans to inoculate 70 per cent of its 50 million people to reach herd immunity. But, the plans could face delays, including those caused by potential export limits placed on vaccines by other countries and a low uptake of shots amid
circulating disinformation.
Some 190 countries and territories that are participating in COVAX have been awaiting details of the rollout. The participants include self-financing upper- and middle-income countries that have put up money and 93 lower-income countries which are expected to benefit. WHO officials have consistently said the way to beat the pandemic is to make sure that everyone is safe from it not just those in wealthier countries that launched vaccination drives in December. COVAX has faced challenges as rich countries have scooped up vaccine supplies, sometimes at premium prices, and undercut WHO's goal of equitable vaccine distribution. Programme leaders have faced issues trying to strike deals with pharmaceutical manufacturers, and only a fraction of the 2 billion doses that have been secured for COVAX involve firm deals.
-Inputs from Reuters and AP