Doses of Ebola candidate vaccines expected to be shipped to Uganda next week- WHO

Thu, Nov 17, 2022
By editor
3 MIN READ

Foreign

DR Tedros Ghebreyesus, Director General of World Health Organisation (WHO), says three candidate Ebola vaccines for a proposed clinical trial in Uganda should be shipped to the country next week.

Ghebreyesus told newsmen on Wednesday at Bali, Indonesia after he participated in the just concluded G20 Summit.

Uganda is going through a major outbreak of the deadly disease, and there have been 141 confirmed cases to date, and 22 probable cases.

Confirmed deaths total 55, with probable deaths at 22, while 73 people have recovered from the disease.

The outbreak was declared on Sept. 20.

Since then, the Ugandan authorities and partners have been working under a global effort coordinated by the UN agency to accelerate the development and deployment of vaccines for use in trials.

The director general said a WHO expert committee has evaluated three candidate vaccines and agreed that they all should be included in the planned trial.

“WHO and Uganda’s Minster of Health have considered and accepted the committee’s recommendation. We expect the first doses of vaccine to be shipped to Uganda next week,” he said.

Meanwhile, a separate group of experts has selected two investigational therapeutics for a trial, as well as a trial design, which has been submitted for approval by WHO and the Ugandan authorities.

He noted that although conflict, climate change, and the global food and energy crises have now overshadowed the COVID-19 pandemic as pressing issues for leaders everywhere, they all have profound implications for health.

“The lack of food and energy, or their over-consumption, can have severe consequences for health and economies,” he said.

“Protecting health against the impacts of these crises is essential, but it also helps to protect economies and societies.”

Ghebreyesus congratulated the G20 for adopting a declaration that included strong support for health and health security.

“The G20 leaders said they remain committed to a healthy and sustainable recovery from the pandemic, and building towards achieving and sustaining universal health coverage under the Sustainable Development Goals,” he said.

The world’s leading economies also reaffirmed commitment to strengthen global health governance, with WHO leading and coordinating.

They also welcomed the establishment of a new Pandemic Fund, among other developments.

He will travel to Qatar on Thursday to participate in the opening of the football World Cup and to highlight how major sporting events can contribute to improving health for all.

“The World Cup is one of the greatest shows on earth, with an estimated audience of five billion people,” he said.

WHO is working with the Qatari authorities and international football association FIFA, to deliver a healthy tournament, with a range of activities to promote physical and mental health, both in the Gulf nation and around the world.

They have also established measures to reduce the spread of disease, including COVID-19.

Other initiatives involve promoting healthy food options at stadiums and in “fan zones” Ghebreyesus added that tobacco was banned in all seating areas and in stadiums.

WHO Goodwill Ambassadors Alisson Becker, goalkeeper on Brazil’s national team, and former Côte d’Ivoire striker Didier Drogba, will be supporting the agency’s work.

Lessons learned from the World Cup will be shared with the International Olympic Committee to support preparations for the 2024 Summer Games in Paris, France, and the Winter Olympics in 2026, which will be held in the Italian cities of Milan and Cortina. (NAN) 

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