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

Delta man arrested after break-in and assault on two strangers in Yaletown hotel

Delta man arrested after break-in and assault on two strangers in Yaletown hotel
On Saturday night, Vancouver Police arrested a 23-year-old Delta man after he assaulted two strangers inside a Yaletown hotel. The man entered the hotel at 6:30 p.m. & assaulted a staff member before bursting into a guest’s room.

Delta man arrested after break-in and assault on two strangers in Yaletown hotel

Twitter board to evaluate Musk's 'unsolicited, non-binding' $43B offer

Twitter board to evaluate Musk's 'unsolicited, non-binding' $43B offer
Earlier in the day, Musk made an offer to buy 100 per cent of Twitter at $54.20 per share, a 54 per cent premium over the closing price of Twitter on January 28, 2022, the trading day before Musk began investing in the company. This is a 38 per cent premium over the closing price of Twitter on April 1, 2022, the trading day before Musk's investment in Twitter was publicly announced.

Twitter board to evaluate Musk's 'unsolicited, non-binding' $43B offer

Feds to target need with housing cash, Hussen says

Feds to target need with housing cash, Hussen says
Housing Minister Ahmed Hussen said the budget's plan to double housing starts over the next decade will aim to incentivize the construction of units needed by seniors who are downsizing, for example, as well as newcomer families.

Feds to target need with housing cash, Hussen says

B.C. fires, floods add uncertainty to spring thaw

B.C. fires, floods add uncertainty to spring thaw
Major wildfires, droughts and mudslides last year dramatically altered the landscape, raising questions about the river's ability to handle the spring thaw, or freshet.

B.C. fires, floods add uncertainty to spring thaw

Confirmed outbreak of avian flu in B.C.

Confirmed outbreak of avian flu in B.C.
She says all poultry producers, including backyard poultry owners, are advised to increase their biosecurity practices and carefully monitor their flocks for any sign of illness.

Confirmed outbreak of avian flu in B.C.

Singh demands Indian PM stop anti-Muslim hate

Singh demands Indian PM stop anti-Muslim hate
In an outspoken intervention into Indian politics, Singh says he is deeply concerned by images, videos and targeted threats of violence against the country's Muslim community.    

Singh demands Indian PM stop anti-Muslim hate