Close X
Friday, November 29, 2024
ADVT 
National

Low vaccine rate fuelling pandemic: GAVI, UNICEF

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 25 Apr, 2022 01:17 PM
  • Low vaccine rate fuelling pandemic: GAVI, UNICEF

OTTAWA - A House of Commons committee was warned today that disruptive new variants of COVID-19 will continue to emerge every few months unless the low vaccination rate rises in poorer countries.

The message was delivered to the Commons foreign affairs committee by the head of GAVI, the international organization leading the distribution of vaccines to the developing world, and a senior United Nations Children's Agency official.

Seth Berkley, the head of GAVI, says while countries such as a Canada are offering fourth doses of COVID-19 vaccines with vaccination rates above 80 per cent of its population, the global rate is just 59 per cent.

He says in the poorest 18 countries less than 10 per cent of people are fully vaccinated.

Berkley says with 2.7 billion people unvaccinated around the world COVID-19 has ample space to mutate into new variants, including the recent Omicron strain, which is sickening triple-vaccinated people in the developed world.

Lily Caprani, the head of global health, vaccines and pandemic response for UNICEF, says children are the hidden victims of the pandemic because they have suffered through school closures, lack of access to maternal and newborn health care and a decline in other immunizations that has led to the re-emergence of measles and polio.

MORE National ARTICLES

Feds signal change on skills training spending

Feds signal change on skills training spending
The head of the Canadian Labour Congress expressed worries on Tuesday that labour groups could be left out of talks over a federal pledge to let workers access skills training programs before they become unemployed.

Feds signal change on skills training spending

Multi-home owners hold up to 41% of stock: StatCan

Multi-home owners hold up to 41% of stock: StatCan
The data from the Canadian Housing Statistics Program, which includes both residential and recreational holdings, reveals multiple-property ownership accounted for 41 per cent of Nova Scotia's housing stock, 39 per cent of New Brunswick's, 31 per cent of Ontario's and 29 per cent of British Columbia's.

Multi-home owners hold up to 41% of stock: StatCan

B.C. coroner wants action on safer drug supply

B.C. coroner wants action on safer drug supply
Lisa Lapointe says urgent action is needed to decriminalize small amounts of drugs for personal use and to provide more people with a safer supply of substances that would replace the profit-driven illicit market.

B.C. coroner wants action on safer drug supply

Four injured in Vancouver fire out of hospital

Four injured in Vancouver fire out of hospital
Shops, restaurants and businesses were heavily damaged below the 89-room Winters Hotel on the building's upper floors, which is overseen by Atira Property Management and provided housing for 71 residents.

Four injured in Vancouver fire out of hospital

B.C. mayors want feds to deliver disaster funds

B.C. mayors want feds to deliver disaster funds
Abbotsford Mayor Henry Braun, whose community was ravaged by flooding, says he was among 28 mayors who met with federal and provincial ministers today to ask about the delivery of $5 billion from Ottawa.

B.C. mayors want feds to deliver disaster funds

Avian flu outbreak claims 260,000 Canadian birds

Avian flu outbreak claims 260,000 Canadian birds
The Canadian Food Inspection Agency says this has been an unprecedented year globally for avian flu, or bird flu as it's also known. Outbreaks of the highly pathogenetic strain H5N1 have been detected in Newfoundland and Labrador, Nova Scotia, Ontario and Alberta since late 2021.

Avian flu outbreak claims 260,000 Canadian birds