Experts Fear Repeat of Covid Failures as US Hoards 80% of Monkeypox Vaccines
Experts on Wednesday voiced rising concern that the U.S. is on the verge of replicating the deadly failures of the Covid-19 pandemic after a review of public records revealed that the world’s richest country currently possesses 80% of the global supply of monkeypox vaccines, leaving poor and vulnerable nations with little to no access.
The watchdog group Public Citizen noted in a new analysis that the U.S. accounts for 36% of all global monkeypox cases recorded thus far but the country has secured the vast majority of the available vaccine supply.
As of August 25, Public Citizen found, that the U.S. had obtained 1.1 million monkeypox vaccine doses—22 times more doses than the European Union and the United Kingdom and around 66 doses for every case recorded in the country to date.
In total, the U.S. has ordered 7 million monkeypox vaccine doses. Meanwhile, Public Citizen observed, “African countries where monkeypox is endemic, including the Democratic Republic of Congo, neither have access to doses nor orders secured, despite recording multiple deaths.”
Peter Maybarduk, director of Public Citizen’s Access to Medicines Program, said in a statement that “once again, vaccines for an outbreak are not available in the vast majority of countries, including in the African states that have fought monkeypox for years.”
“We still are waiting for President Biden to put forward a plan to fight global monkeypox and avoid the tragic mistakes of the Covid crisis,” Maybarduk added.
The group argued Wednesday that the Biden administration should deploy the Defense Production Act to convert stored vaccine bulk into millions of finished monkeypox vaccine doses “to help surge global supply.”
“It should also work with partners to transfer technology and help shore up global vaccine production, including in Africa,” Public Citizen added. “Last month, the director of the Africa CDC described the stakes for monkeypox: ‘The solutions need to be global in nature,’ he said. ‘If we’re not safe, the rest of the world is not safe.'”
Such massive inequities in vaccine access resemble the ongoing crisis of coronavirus vaccine distribution, which has been overwhelmingly concentrated in rich countries as pharmaceutical companies cling to monopoly control over production.
Originally published at Commondreams.org.