Over 400m Doses Of COVID-19 Vaccine Administered Worldwide
More than 400 million doses of vaccines have been given around the world as at Thursday, according to a tally.
According to AFP, despite the suspension of Oxford/AstraZeneca shot in more than a dozen countries, vaccination campaigns against COVID-19 continue to pick up speed, the count based on official sources found.
Read Also: Norway, Denmark, Iceland Suspend Use Of AstraZeneca COVID-19 Vaccine Over Blood Clot Fears
In a sign of how the pace is picking up, the last 100 million people vaccinated got their jabs in 11 days — six times faster than it took to give the first 100 million.
By Thursday at 16:30 GMT (4:30pm local time) at least 402.3 million doses had been administered in more than 158 countries around the world.
While rich countries have fared best, vaccination in the poorer countries is at last starting under the free Covax programme.
Israel is still leading the race by far, with nearly three out of five of its population having received at least one dose. Around a half of Israeli have received a second dose.
United Kingdom (38 percent), the United Arab Emirates (between 35 and 70 percent), Chile (28 percent), the United States (22 percent), Bahrain (22 percent) and Serbia (16 percent by March 12) are also doing well.
In terms of pure numbers, US is way ahead with 113 million jabs given before China with 65 million (as of March 14), India (39 million) and the UK with 27.6 million.
European Union countries have given 54.4 million doses to 8.5 percent of the bloc’s population.
Out of 13 of the poorest countries which have started their vaccination campaigns, nine started in early March using vaccines delivered for free under COVAX scheme launched by the World Health Organization, the Gavi vaccine alliance and Cepi coalition.
Only 0.1 percent of the doses injected around the world were were given in these poor countries, home to nine percent of the global population. In contrast, the richest countries — which have 16 percent of humanity — have had 58 percent of the doses. More than a quarter of all doses given so far (28 percent) were in the US.
The vaccine developed by AstraZeneca and Oxford University has already been administered in some 100 countries or territories, outshining its competitors.
Although low cost, it is being widely used in richer countries such as the UK and the EU as well as in poorer countries, thanks to the Covax scheme.
It is also being administered in India, where it is also made. The Swedish-British vaccine has however been dogged by problems, after blood clots were observed in a number of vaccinated people. However, European Medicines Agency on Thursday said it was not linked to an increased risk of blood clots.
The vaccines produced by US-German Pfizer/BioNTech — which is being used in more than 70 countries — and the American Moderna, used in more than 40, are more expensive and harder to store. They are mainly used in the rich countries.
Russia’s Sputnik V vaccine, in use in more than 20 countries, and China’s Sinopharm and Sinovac jabs — which are used in 20 and a dozen countries respectively — have been administered mostly in their home markets as well as emerging and developing countries.
Meanwhile, America’s Johnson & Johnson vaccine, the first to require just one dose, has been approved in the US, Canada and the EU but has so far only been rolled out in the US and South Africa.
Some countries have accessed vaccines through the COVAX initiative, bilateral deals and donations.
Thirty-eight African countries have received more than 25 million doses of COVID-19 vaccines, and 30 have started vaccination campaigns.
About seven million jabs have been given on the continent while its giant, Nigeria, has administered over 8,000 doses.
This comes despite the controversy trailing the AstraZeneca vaccine. Several European countries had suspended use of the vaccine after reports of blood clots in some recipients.
World Health Organisation (WHO) said the vaccine is safe, dismissing claims that there is a link between it and the reported side effects.
So far, there are 122 million COVID-19 cases worldwide, 69 million recoveries and 2.69 million fatalities.