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COVID-19 cases declining globally – WHO DG

by Haruna Gimba

By Haruna Gimba

The Director-General of the World Health Organisation (WHO), Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus , said the number of reported cases of COVID-19 globally has declined for the fifth consecutive week.

Speaking to journalists at a regular press briefing in Geneva, the head of the UN health agency said the declining showed that “simple public health measures work, even in the presence of variants.”

“Last week saw the lowest number of reported weekly cases since October. Nearly 50 per cent drop this year, therefore how we respond to this trend is what matters now,” he said.

While acknowledging that there is more reason for hope of bringing the pandemic under control, the WHO chief warned, “the fire is not out, but we have reduced its size. If we stop fighting it on any front, it will come roaring back.”

WHO gave the green light for two versions of the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine to be rolled out globally under an emergency listing, which assesses and assures the quality, safety and efficacy of COVID-19 vaccines and is also a distribution prerequisite under the UN-led vaccine initiative COVAX.

One of the vaccines was produced by SKBio in Korea, the other by the Serum Institute of India.

Following the Pfizer-BioNTech inoculations, these are the second and third vaccines to receive emergency use listing.

“We now have all the pieces in place for the rapid distribution of vaccines,” said Tedros. 

However, he reiterated the need to scale-up production along with his call for vaccine developers to send their dossiers to WHO for review when they submit them to regulators in high-income countries.

Ensuring the rapid and equitable rollout of vaccines globally is essential for saving lives, stabilizing health systems, protecting livelihoods and steadying economies, according to the WHO chief.

“Fully funding COVAX represents the greatest possible stimulus and is a rounding error compared with the trillions of dollars that have been mobilized in G7 countries to support their economies’, he said.

The WHO chief looked forward to an upcoming meeting of the G7 industrialized countries on Friday to discuss vaccine equity.

And he underscored the need to continue building the demand for vaccines by ensuring people has the right information, recalling that a year ago, “we were not only fighting a pandemic, we were fighting an infodemic.”

The solution is to fight misinformation, delete false or misleading statements, listen to concerns and questions and provide answers with good information, Tedros upheld.

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