从 COVID-19 疫苗采购战略看非洲疫苗的公平获取

COVID Pub Date : 2024-02-17 DOI:10.3390/covid4020019
George L. O’Hara, Sam Halabi, Olohikhuae Egbokhare
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引用次数: 0

摘要

(1) 背景:本研究探讨了当前国际社会在预防和准备下一次大流行病方面的两个薄弱环节:缺乏支持全球政策措施的有力证据,以及这些措施在多大程度上促进了公平。(2) 方法:利用联合国儿童基金会公开但未充分利用的 COVID-19 市场仪表板数据库,我们对截至 2022 年中期的疫苗交付情况以及非洲低收入和中低收入国家(LMICs)在 COVID-19 大流行期间使用的疫苗采购策略进行了横向分析。(3) 结果:以 COVAX 为代表的集中采购(高收入国家提供疫苗和资金的信息交换中心,以实现中低收入国家的公平采购)挤掉了未来必须支持的其他战略:区域采购、捐赠和双边采购(双方之间具有约束力的协议:一方为卖方(即国家政府或疫苗制造商),另一方为受方(即国家政府)),这些战略与技术转让和提高当地生产能力有着重要关系。(4) 结论:扩大 COVAX 疫苗采购替代品的范围,如区域联合采购和双边采购,可分层降低供应协议无法实现实际供应的风险。与低收入和中等收入国家分享生产疫苗所需的技术可以减少双边采购的障碍。集合采购联盟代表特定区域内的参与国采购疫苗剂量,可通过考虑这些国家共同的基础设施限制而使低收入和中等收入国家受益。最后,捐赠可加强对低收入国家至关重要的全球再分配供应。
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Equitable Vaccine Access in Light of COVID-19 Vaccine Procurement Strategies in Africa
(1) Background: This study addresses two weaknesses in current international efforts to prevent and prepare for the next pandemic: the lack of robust evidence supporting global policy measures and the corresponding extent to which those measures advance equity. (2) Methods: Using UNICEF’s publicly available but underused COVID-19 Market Dashboard database, we conducted a cross-sectional analysis of vaccine deliveries as of mid-2022 and vaccine procurement strategies used by African low- and lower middle-income countries (LMICs) over the course of the COVID-19 pandemic. (3) Results: Pooled procurement of the kind typified by COVAX (a clearinghouse for high-income-country contributions of vaccines and financing toward the end of equitable LMIC procurement) crowded out alternative strategies that must be supported in future: regional procurement, donation, and bilateral procurement (binding agreement between two parties: one seller (i.e., a national government or a vaccine manufacturer) and one recipient (i.e., national government)), which showed a significant relationship with technology transfer and advancing local production capacity. (4) Conclusions: Expanding the scope of vaccine procurement alternatives to COVAX such as regional pooled procurement and bilateral procurement can stratify risk of supply agreements not materializing in actual supply. Sharing the technology necessary to produce vaccines with LMICs can mitigate obstacles to bilateral procurement. A pooled purchase alliance to procure vaccine doses on behalf of participating countries within a given region can benefit LMICs by accounting for infrastructure limitations that these countries share. Finally, donations bolster global redistributed supply essential to LMICs.
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