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Economic recovery after covid18 linked to vaccination - Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

The financial damage wrought by covid19 can be felt across many economies, from increased unemployment rates to businesses closures.

For the last 15 months many businesses have experienced interrupted operations or closure. As we have seen in many countries, when cases fall and social distancing is relaxed, it leads to a rise in both economic and social activity and the spread of infection.

Vaccination interrupts this dynamic by limiting transmission. As more and more people get vaccinated, the risk associated with relaxing public health regulations is reduced, allowing a wide range of social and economic activity to safely resume.

Domestically the pace at which commercial and social activity can resume safely mainly depends on how effectively mass vaccination can be accomplished. This will in turn depend on the schedule of vaccine arrivals, the quantities, the rate at which vaccines get into arms and the level of vaccine acceptance. While choosing to get vaccinated is ultimately a personal decision, it can also be viewed as a way to reignite our economy and society.

To this end, various business service organisations and associations have come together to launch the Let's Do Our Part campaign. Interested parties can visit ttbeatcovid19.com to access the resources and various creative assets. Effort has been made to provide individuals with simple prompts and reminders for use in their business places and media platforms, including social media. All the resources available were developed to be consistent with the advice and guidance given by the World Health Organisation (WHO), the Pan American Health Organisation (PAHO) and the Ministry of Health.

The business community also continues to support the "vaccinate and operate" drive to initially vaccinate all frontline workers and allow businesses to reopen responsibly. Public-private-sector partnerships have proven to be an effective way to execute mass vaccinations, and the offer from the private sector to assist in various areas of the vaccination programme remains open. These proposals for providing support relate to offering locations that can be used as mass vaccination sites as more vaccines become available, since easy-to-access vaccination sites can lend support to the drive. Technical resources that may be required to provide additional logistical support are also available if needed.

The Organisation of Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) in its May 2021 Economic Outlook noted that 'some countries are recovering much faster than others. Korea and the United States are reaching pre-pandemic per capita income levels after about 18 months while much of Europe is expected to take nearly three years to recover. In Mexico and South Africa, it could take between three and five years.'

Even though vaccines are now available, they are in limited quantities. WHO director general Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus has been lobbying for vaccine equity, remarking at the virtual fifth sitting of the OECS Assembly that Caribbean economies can

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A November 26 letter from the presidency asked the head of Uganda's national drug authority to 'work out a mechanism' to clear the importation of the vaccines.

China has about five COVID-19 vaccine candidates at different levels of trials. It was not clear what vaccine was being imported into Uganda.

One of the frontrunners is the Sinopharm vaccine developed by the Beijing Institute of Biological Product, a unit of Sinopharm’s China National Biotec Group (CNBG).

On Wednesday, the United Arab Emirates said the vaccine has 86% efficacy, citing an interim analysis of late-stage clinical trials.

China has used the drug to vaccinate up to a million people under its emergency use program.

On Tuesday, Morocco said it was ordering up to 10 million doses of the vaccine.

Record cases

Uganda on Monday registered 701 new COVID-19 cases, the highest-ever daily increase, bringing its national count to 23,200.

The new cases were out of the 5,578 samples tested for the novel coronavirus over the past 24 hours, the country's health ministry said in a statement.

Tuesday's tally was 606, the second-highest ever number of new infections, bringing the cumulative number of confirmed cases in the east African country to 23,860.

Health authorities have blamed ongoing election campaigns which have drawn huge crowds for the rise in infections.

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BY LORRAINE MUROMO/VANESSA GONYE THE World Health Organisation (WHO) has said a potentially deadly third wave of COVID-19 was imminent at a time when most African countries’ healthcare facilities and personnel were overstretched and grossly underfunded. In a recent report, WHO said Sub-Saharan African countries were already facing the threat of new COVID-19 variants and could be hit by the third wave in the coming weeks. Zimbabwe is among countries at risk of being hit by the third wave of COVID-19. The WHO report stated that worryingly across the continent, doctors, nurses and other healthcare workers were stretched to the limit as the total cumulative number of infections this week rose to above 4,1 million, with more than 110 000 fatalities. It said this was a sharp rise from the 2,7 million infections recorded at the end of December. “COVID-19 has heavily jolted the health workforce in the African region. Since the beginning of the pandemic, 267 health worker infections have been recorded on average everyday, translating to 11 new health worker infections per hour,” read the WHO report. “South Africa leads with more than 1,5 million reported cases and more than 52 000 deaths.  Only 7 000 000 people have now been vaccinated in a continent of more than a billion people,” the report said. WHO Zimbabwe country representative Alex Gasasira said if people became complacent during the Easter holidays, COVID-19 infections might rise. Zimbabwe has since embarked on its COVID-19 vaccination programme, which targets 60% of the population or 10 million people in order to achieve herd immunity. Just over 115 000 people have been vaccinated in over two months since the vaccination programme began. Gasasira yesterday told NewsDay that the third wave was anticipated in the country, hence the strengthened control measures being taken to ensure that it does not become as deadly as the second wave that was fuelled by travelling between countries and cities. “One of the things we were worried about this Easter holiday was that people would fail to comply with WHO COVID-19 regulations and want to travel,”he said. “We are hoping the measures put in place by the government will help in limiting transmission. To complement these efforts is the vaccination programme.” After Christmas last year, Zimbabwe experienced a surge in COVID-19 cases. COVID-19 national response taskforce chief co-ordinator Agnes Mahomva said: “We are continuing with the strategies put in place. The public needs to strictly adhere to WHO recommendations, maintaining social distancing and handwashing among other things. We are encouraging everyone to be vaccinated and to observe set standards on managing the spread of COVID-19 as the two main ways in controlling the further spread of COVID-19.” Follow us on Twitter @NewsDayZimbabwe

The post ‘Zim, Africa ill-prepared for COVID-19 3rd wave’ appeared first on NewsDay Zimbabwe.

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