How rich countries are making the pandemic last longer - YouTube

Channel: Vox

[0]
In May of 2020, the United States government struck a deal.
[5]
$1.2 billion would go to the British drugmaker AstraZeneca,
[9]
to speed up their Covid-19 vaccine research.
[12]
In exchange, AstraZeneca promised the US 300 million doses
[16]
if the vaccine made it through safety and efficacy trials.
[20]
Earlier that month, the United Kingdom signed a similar deal with the same company,
[24]
to secure 90 million doses.
[26]
These types of transactions, where a country makes a deal directly with a company,
[30]
are called bilateral deals.
[32]
And in 2020, rich countries made a lot of them.
[39]
Those billions of dollars helped fund research
[41]
that brought us the world鈥檚 leading Covid vaccines in record time.
[45]
But that money also determined where those vaccines would go.
[50]
By January 2021, 96% of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine doses
[55]
that were scheduled to be produced by the end of the year, had already been bought.
[59]
And 100% of Moderna's.
[62]
Countries representing 16% of the global population
[65]
held over half of the doses from the most promising vaccine developers.
[70]
Basically: rich countries got vaccines. Poorer countries didn鈥檛.
[76]
In Brazil and India, health systems are being pushed to the limits
[79]
at the same time that the US is quickly opening up vaccinations for anyone.
[84]
"That's making the pandemic last longer.
[86]
It's allowing infections to rage, and new variants to arise,
[91]
and at the end of the day, more people are dying than need to be."
[94]
The same deals that helped develop vaccines,
[97]
are making it harder to get them around the world.
[100]
Now what?
[105]
"What's happening now, with the Covid-19 vaccine inequality,
[108]
isn't at all unprecedented."
[110]
In 2009, the World Health Organization declared Swine Flu a pandemic.
[114]
"We are all in this together."
[117]
After securing their own vaccine deals, these nine higher-income countries
[121]
pledged 120 million doses to the WHO for lower income countries.
[126]
But they only started sending those donations after they realized
[130]
the outbreak wasn鈥檛 as serious as everyone initially thought.
[133]
"For years, we've seen how technology is rolled out in rich countries,
[136]
and it takes decades for them to trickle down to poorer countries."
[140]
The problem starts with the vaccine market itself.
[144]
Getting a vaccine from development, to manufacturing, to distribution
[148]
is a multi-step process.
[151]
By making bilateral deals with developers and suppliers early on,
[154]
rich countries got in line here: at manufacturing.
[158]
But there was no guarantee that any given vaccine would work,
[162]
or get past regulators to reach the market.
[166]
If a vaccine fails shortly after funding, those billion-dollar investments are lost.
[173]
So, to offset that risk, countries invested in multiple options and suppliers,
[177]
often securing enough doses to cover their populations several times.
[182]
As of March 2021, Canada had secured over 300 million doses:
[187]
Enough to cover their population five times over.
[191]
And the deals the US made were enough to cover its population at least twice.
[195]
Which worked out for them,
[197]
because even though they secured 300 million doses of AstraZeneca a year ago,
[202]
as of April, it still hasn鈥檛 been approved for use in the country.
[205]
But the Pfizer and Moderna doses that the government pre-purchased
[208]
are still enough to cover most of the population.
[213]
Most countries can鈥檛 afford to make multiple high-risk investments early on,
[218]
so they wait until the vaccine is further along in the approval process.
[222]
And by then, they鈥檙e already at the back of a very long line.
[227]
Peru, for example, made a bilateral deal with AstraZeneca,
[230]
but won鈥檛 see those doses until at least September.
[233]
"Those that purchased first, or made the biggest orders,
[236]
or invested into the research and development, are standing at the front of the line.
[240]
Which is why the US has gotten 240 million doses of vaccine so far, at least,
[247]
and most of the poorer countries in the world don't have 240 million doses combined."
[252]
So, is there a way to get a lot of money here,
[256]
without creating a priority line over here?
[259]
Maybe.
[262]
One program underway is designed to work as a sort of middleman,
[265]
between countries and the drug companies making vaccines.
[269]
It鈥檚 called Covax.
[271]
It鈥檚 an initiative formed by three global health groups,
[274]
including the World Health Organization.
[276]
And its main objective is to provide vaccines to 92 middle- and low-income countries
[280]
that were shut out from making their own deals.
[283]
"Covax is kind of like the Paris Climate Agreement of the vaccine world.
[286]
So it's this multilateral effort, with almost 200 countries that have joined.
[291]
And the idea is that everyone has access to Covid-19 vaccines,
[295]
regardless of the country's GDP."
[298]
It does this using a two-part system.
[300]
The first part allows high-income countries to buy into and access multiple vaccines at once.
[306]
So, instead of one country giving $2 billion directly to AstraZeneca,
[311]
they鈥檇 give the money to Covax, which would use it to fund several different vaccines.
[316]
This way, if one or two of them failed early on, it wouldn鈥檛 be a total loss;
[320]
the other vaccines in the portfolio would make up for it.
[324]
It鈥檚 a multilateral system that鈥檚 much lower-risk for those countries than a bilateral one.
[330]
The idea is that Covax could use that larger purchasing power
[333]
to negotiate deals with manufacturers and developers on a global scale,
[338]
which would drive the costs down, and fund vaccine development.
[343]
The second part buys vaccines for lower-income countries.
[346]
It's funded by donations from wealthier governments and charities.
[350]
The US alone has pledged $4 billion to this fund.
[354]
As vaccines become available, Covax hands them out to every country at once,
[358]
so rich countries and poor countries all get a fair share.
[363]
At least, that鈥檚 the idea.
[365]
"The biggest problem with Covax is these bilateral deals we talked about."
[370]
For Covax to work as intended, it needs most countries to be using its multilateral system.
[375]
But Covax was formed a month into the pandemic,
[379]
when many countries had already invested in bilateral deals.
[383]
So the incentive for rich countries to join Covax was low.
[386]
But without them, Covax might be underfunded.
[390]
So it let them have it both ways:
[393]
Rich countries could join Covax, and keep their bilateral deals
[396]
that would get them more vaccines, faster.
[399]
"And those basically undermined Covax,
[402]
because they put themselves at the front of the line,
[404]
ahead of the access that countries will get through this collective agreement."
[408]
The US, for example, has donated the most money to Covax,
[411]
but is also still at the front of the manufacturing lines,
[415]
waiting for its own doses.
[418]
The US and UK have both promised to donate some surplus doses to Covax,
[422]
but neither country has said when.
[425]
"This means rich countries, like the US, decide who gets what, when.
[429]
Instead of some global collaborative process of vaccine allocation."
[434]
Experts are skeptical Covax will meet its original goal
[437]
of delivering 2 billion vaccine doses by the end of 2021.
[442]
As of April, they鈥檝e only purchased around half that amount,
[445]
and delivered 45 million doses.
[447]
"So they've reached a huge number of countries,
[450]
but nowhere near enough to cover even frontline health workers,
[453]
or other essential workers, in most of the countries that these vaccines are going to."
[459]
Meanwhile, as of April, the US has already administered over 200 million doses.
[466]
"What Covax is setting out to do is hugely challenging.
[469]
They probably won't meet their own first targets.
[471]
But they are getting vaccines into countries
[474]
that probably wouldn't otherwise have them this quickly."
[477]
Vaccine inequality is bigger than just bilateral deals.
[481]
It鈥檚 in every step of the process,
[483]
from limited manufacturing to cold-chain distribution;
[487]
even debates around the intellectual property of vaccines.
[491]
Our current system is not a well-oiled machine at all,
[496]
and there鈥檚 a lot of work to do if we want to be better prepared for the future.
[500]
"One of the things that we've learned about pandemic preparedness is,
[503]
you can't really build it after the fact. And that's still what we're doing."