A double blow for the global south, particularly Africa, is that it was just beginning to pivot toward the single-dose Johnson & Johnson vaccine when US medicines regulators paused its use on Tuesday, after just six cases of the same symptoms were reported among nearly 7 million people who’d had the shot. One of those cases was fatal. The company itself paused its rollout across Europe.
Several European nations had already limited the use of the AstraZeneca vaccine to older age groups after European medicines regulators found a “possible link” between the shot and the rare, sometimes fatal, blood condition. Denmark and Norway have dropped the shot altogether.
There are concerns now that a global two-tier vaccine system is emerging, with wealthy countries using the more expensive vaccines — like the Pfizer/BioNTech and Moderna shots — based on newer technology, while the cheaper AstraZeneca, and possibly the J&J, vaccines, are used in the global south. And that could hit confidence levels in Covid-19 in vaccines overall.
“If wealthy countries say they are only going to have ‘gold standard’ with the most expensive vaccines and then say AstraZeneca is not good enough for us in the global north, but it is good enough for the global south, it could reduce uptake of the vaccine and hamper efforts to vaccinate the world,” said Dr. Peter Drobac, Director of the Skoll Centre for Social Entrepreneurship at Oxford Saïd Business School.
YOU ASKED. WE ANSWERED.
Q. I’m a young adult, and these rare blood clot events seem to affect people my age. Should I still get the vaccine?
A. The US has put a pause on the use of the J&J vaccine while authorities work out if there is indeed a link. European and UK authorities think there is a possible link between the AstraZeneca vaccine and very rare blood clots in younger adults. Many European countries have limited the use of that shot to older adults, but it isn’t being used at all in the United States, where it isn’t yet approved.
Medical professionals are reporting an increase in the number of young people being hospitalized with Covid-19, including in ICUs. It’s unclear how much of a role new variants might be playing in this rising number, but in the US, doctors are reporting the B.1.1.7 variant, first identified in the UK, in many younger patients. Young people can also transmit the virus to more vulnerable people. Here’s what else to know about Covid-19 vaccines.
WHAT’S IMPORTANT TODAY
New Zealand and Australia were Covid success stories. Why are they behind on vaccine rollouts?
The neighboring nations have been widely celebrated for their handling of the Covid-19 pandemic, both taking on a strategy to stamp out the virus altogether. They have been so successful that they have created a joint green zone, allowing people to fly between the two countries without undergoing the strict hotel quarantine period that has turned millions of travelers off visiting the countries over the past year.
Pfizer says people are likely to need a third shot 6 to 12 months after their first round
It’s not yet clear exactly how often this would be needed, but Bourla said a likely scenario would be “for a third dose somewhere between six and 12 months and then from there, there will be an annual re-vaccination. But all this needs to be confirmed.”
Researchers at Stanford Medicine told CNN they have begun testing the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine in children aged 2 to 5 in a Phase 1 trial of the shot. The group will trial the shot in 144 children across five sites in the United States, while Cincinnati Children’s Hospital began administering the shots in kids aged 2 to 4 on Monday, and plans to give the shot to some 340 children.
China’s economy grew by a record 18.3% in Q1 in bounce-back
The surge is mainly because of a low base effect, as China had shut down large swaths of its economy in early 2020 to contain the coronavirus outbreak. Still, the figures speak to a heathy recovery after a tumultuous year.
ON OUR RADAR
- A heated exchange took place between Rep. Jim Jordan and Dr. Anthony Fauci. Jordan said repeatedly coronavirus precautions violated first amendment rights. A frustrated Fauci hit back.
- India reported 217,353 new cases of Covid-19 on Friday, marking the country’s highest single-day case count for the third consecutive day, according to data from the Indian Ministry of Health.
- Chile’s vaccination rollout was fast and broad. But Covid-19 cases there are spiking, and the country offers up some lessons to learn.
- Following a Covid-19 outbreak within the Vancouver Canucks team, the National Hockey League has abruptly delayed the team’s scheduled return to the ice.
- Doctors Without Borders (MSF) called on Brazilian authorities to urgently acknowledge the severity of the Covid-19 pandemic and put in place a central Covid-19 response and coordination system.
TODAY’S PODCAST
“You get vaccinated to protect yourself, but if enough people get vaccinated, the virus can’t circulate as much, not as many mutations will develop, and we won’t have to worry about the variants either.” — Dr. Sanjay Gupta, CNN’s Chief Medical Correspondent