Countries in region teaming up for next pandemic, breaking ‘cycle of panic and neglect’

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Countries in the region are joining hands and building up resources, such as in vaccine production, to prepare for the next pandemic. They do not want to be caught off guard by future health crises.

Health representatives from Asean countries met recently in Seoul, and several spoke of the difficulties they faced in getting vaccines to protect their people as the pandemic raged.

Dr Sunate Chuenkitmongkol, deputy director of Thailand’s National Vaccine Institute, said countries learnt during the pandemic that as demand for vaccines far exceeded supply, the ”negotiation power of the supplier is bigger than that of the procurer”.

This meant that rich countries could get vaccines, while middle- to lower-income countries faced great difficulties. Vaccine nationalism also led to countries preventing the export of vaccines till their domestic needs had been met.

To ensure that they are better prepared for future emergencies, several countries gathered in December at the 2nd Vaccine Cooperation Forum in the Indo-Pacific Region, co-sponsored by South Korea, the United States and Australia.

Cho Hyun-dong, South Korea’s Vice-Minister of Foreign Affairs, said in his opening address: “We need to take full advantage of our current cooperation to strengthen preparedness against future health crises.

“Over the past three years, we have experienced first-hand the importance of united action against the common threat of Covid-19. We have learnt the effectiveness of joint response and the importance of equitable access to vaccines and treatments.”

He spoke of how Asean nations launched the Asean Covid-19 Response Fund and the Regional Reserve of Medical Supplies, making a rapid regionwide response possible.

South Korea, he said, was one of the early contributors to the Asean Covid-19 Response Fund, providing US$6 million towards the region’s detection capabilities.

The World Health Organisation (WHO) has appointed South Korea as a global biomanufacturing training hub for low- and middle-income countries looking to produce biologicals, such as vaccines, insulin, monoclonal antibodies and cancer treatments.

Cho said South Korea looks forward to expanding this programme to further facilitate vaccine self-reliance in the region. More training facilities are being built and will come on stream in Andong city in 2025 and Hwasun county in 2026.

Philip Goldberg, the United States’ Ambassador to South Korea, said in his welcome speech: “Investments that increase resilience and adaptability of health systems are much less costly than emergency responses.”

Countries need to “break this cycle of panic and neglect”, pouring in resources when there is a pandemic raging and withdrawing those resources once the immediate danger is over, he said. Instead, they need to commit to sustained investments in health systems.

Catherine Raper, Australia’s Ambassador to South Korea, stressed the importance of cooperation during a pandemic. Australia, she said, had shared more than 52 million Covid-19 vaccine doses with regional partners to date, providing more than three million doses to countries in the Pacific and more than 49 million doses to South-east Asia.

She added that the pandemic has shown the importance of having a diversity of vaccine types and manufacturers, and welcomed the forum’s aim to “foster the networks and linkages to improve vaccine research, development and manufacturing in our region”.

Several Asean nations, such as Indonesia and Thailand, spoke of how their countries are ramping up vaccine production facilities.

 

SOURCE: NEWS AGENCIES

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