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U.S. to Pump $400 Million Into Vaccination Programs for Other Countries

Most of the money will go toward getting shots into arms in remote areas and helping countries with vaccine policies and delivery logistics

TUESDAY, Dec. 7, 2021 (HealthDay News) -- The United States announced Monday that it will pour $400 million into a new program that should help other countries speed vaccines to their citizens.

Called the Initiative for Global Vaccine Access, the U.S. Agency for International Development said in a statement the program would "enhance international coordination" to help countries "overcome vaccine access barriers." The agency added that it would focus on countries in Africa. Most of the money will go toward getting shots into arms in remote areas and helping countries with vaccine policies and delivery logistics, the agency said. The remainder of the money will go where there are surges in cases and to helping countries make their own vaccines.

The latest effort is above and beyond the $1.3 billion already committed to expanding vaccine access around the world. But one expert said the program, known as Global Vax, falls short. "It's not nearly enough to vastly ramp up global vaccination, but it's a milestone," Lawrence Gostin, a Georgetown University law professor who specializes in public health, told The New York Times.

Meanwhile, Covax, the U.N.-backed multibillion-dollar vaccine alliance, has not met its goal to procure doses for poor countries. The alliance includes international health agencies and nonprofits whose goal is to make sure poor countries get vaccines as quickly as the rich. However, the alliance has struggled to get doses from airport tarmacs into people's arms, The Times reported.

Biden administration officials have said that several African nations, particularly South Africa, are refusing vaccine donations because their supply exceeds the demand -- in part because of vaccine hesitancy. But public health experts suggest another reason: Some countries are not able to distribute the doses they receive, which often arrive on short notice, The Times said.

The New York Times Article

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