Saturday, 31 October 2020

01 November 2020

 Calls for Equitable Global Distribution 

of COVID-19 Vaccine



Leaders, including Pope Francis, are calling for just and equitable distribution of any future COVID-19 vaccine.  This article was published in the November-December 2020 issue of NewsNotes. 


As pharmaceutical companies work feverishly to develop a safe and effective vaccine for COVID-19, efforts are being made to ensure that any successful vaccine will be distributed equitably among countries so as not to bypass the poorest and most vulnerable. Pope Francis and Catholic health organizations have called for the practice of solidarity through just and equitable distribution of the vaccine. 

The World Health Organization (WHO) and associate groups have organized a platform called the COVAX Facility to support the research, development, and manufacturing of over 150 vaccine candidates and provide equitable pricing and distribution. The goal is to provide 2 billion doses by the end of 2021. Eighty-two developed countries have committed to the project and contributed funding, and 92 low- and middle-income countries are eligible to participate. 

Notably, the United States and Russia have not joined in this effort, although China has recently committed. In July 2020, the U.S. announced it would withdraw from the World Health Organization.

All countries that commit to COVAX will receive enough vaccine doses for 20 percent of their population as soon as vaccines become available. In an attempt to end the acute phase of the pandemic quickly, these vaccines will be distributed first to health care workers, the elderly, people with preexisting conditions and people living in close quarters. 

The logistics of vaccinating 7.8 billion people will require immense cooperation and planning. Of the four major vaccine types currently being tested, one will require extremely cold storage, which will be problematic even for highly developed countries. About 38 percent of the global population lives in places that lack temperature-controlled storage for vaccines. In addition, the vaccine may require two doses for efficacy, which will increase logistical challenges. At this point it is impossible to know how long vaccines will be effective, so booster vaccines may be required as well. 

Vaccine development is a long and tricky process. It usually requires four, strictly-monitored, phased trials over 10-15 years before a vaccine is approved. In the United States it is possible to bypass these requirements in an emergency situation, such as a pandemic, so long as the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) believes that there are reasonable benefits that outweigh the risks of vaccine distribution, given the evidence available. 

However, if the FDA gives a vaccine Emergency Use Authorization, the standards for safety will be higher than those of other vaccine candidates, with routine re-evaluation of the vaccine as new data becomes available. In addition, vulnerable populations such as pregnant women and children will only be able to receive the vaccine when more data on its safety becomes available. 

The Catholic Health Association in the United States supports the guidelines for vaccine distribution set by the WHO and stresses that development and distribution of an effective vaccine should be based on the principle of solidarity so as to protect vulnerable people and the general public. In a public letter, the Association urged that global leaders “[give] all people access to the vaccine while minimizing global and domestic competition which drives up prices for limited supplies.” They added that, “All people, barring exceptional circumstances, have a responsibility to be vaccinated.”

In an interview on October 7, Pope Francis stated clearly his call for justice in the distribution of a vaccine: “The vaccine is the patrimony of humanity, of all humanity, it is universal; because the health of our peoples, as the pandemic has taught us, is a common heritage, it belongs to the common good.” 

The WHO Director-General, Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, has welcomed the comments from Pope Francis. “Supply nationalism exacerbated the pandemic and contributed to the total failure of the global supply chain,” said Ghebreyesus. “We have learned the hard way that the fastest way to end this pandemic and to reopen economies is to start by protecting the highest risk populations everywhere, rather than the entire populations of just some countries.” 

On Twitter, Ghebreyesus added, “I couldn’t agree more with [the words of Pope Francis]. The #Covid19 pandemic shows that we must make health a human right for all and not allow it to be a privilege for the few. It also gives us an opportunity to rebuild a better, safer, fairer world – together!”
 

Photo, Vaccine production, by Sanofi Pasteur via Flickr

This is an article that I wrote for the Maryknoll Office of Global Concerns 

As a woman, I am celebrating 100 years of women's suffrage in the USA this month having voted in our elections once again.  I am aware that women are still not allowed to vote in the Vatican City State and that women still find it difficult in countries like Saudi Arabia, Pakhistan, Afghanistan, Uganda and Kenya to name a few...

https://graziadaily.co.uk/life/real-life/countries-where-women-can-t-vote/

PEACE OF ALL SAINTS DAY 1ST NOVEMBER

It is the practice of Maryknoll Lay Missioners in Kenya 
to pray and work for peace on the first of each month.


Thursday, 1 October 2020

01 October 2020


       POST ELECTION VIOLENCE
I am remembering the postelection violence that I experienced in Kenya in 2008.  Each of these pictures depict events I actually saw myself.  Certain shops were looted and destroyed because they belonged to a particular ethnic group.  Homes were destroyed and people were crowded into camps for displaced people.  Young kids were paid the equivalent of USD 0.50 to carry petrol in yellow plastic jerry cans, throw it on buildings and burn them down.

I saw hundreds of people in our little hospital each day and heard their stories of rape, beatings, torture and relatives shot in their fields at 9am in the morning while planting their crops.
     I had seen all of this during the 12 years I worked in Sudan during the second war (1991-2003) but I never expected to see it in Kenya.  We later learned it had been planned by others for more than a year before the elections.  Some of the planning was done by our neighbors whom we knew.

     From December 2007 to April 2008 we ran out of petrol and had to wait in long lines until it became available.  A nearby farm couldn't transport their milk to the creamery so I bought it to feed the people in our displaced camps.  Our ability to use internet was through the phones and we couldn't buy air time to load our phones.  A friend in Nairobi would send air time to my phone when I as desperate.  I watched from my little home while fires on Mount Elgon burned at night for weeks on end.  The Bishop, Maurice Crowley, wanted me to leave this little home in a small village and stay in a bigger town and I was grateful for his concern.  But I felt safer away from the bigger town and I had a lot of work to do at the hospital.  He always answered his phone when I called him for something I needed.
     I couldn't leave our little town except by air during the worst of it.  When I left in April to come home to care for my mother I travelled in a bus under armed convoy through the burned out villages and camps with flimsy tents for people who had lost their homes.
     I now expect to see postelection violence in the USA next month.  I am preparing for it.  I have registered to vote by mail and am awaiting my ballot.  As soon as it arrives I will complete it and take it to the drop box at the voting center.  I am encouraging everyone to vote.  Please make a specific plan for when and where you will vote.  Tell others about it to help you stick to your plan and encourage other to do the same.
     I am recommitting myself to the Pax Christi Vow of Nonviolence.
https://paxchristiusa.org/resources/vow-of-nonviolence/#:~:text=Vow%20of%20Nonviolence%20%E2%80%93%20Pax%20Christi%20USA.%20Tens,liturgy%2C%20or%20any%20other%20way%20that%20suits%20you.

     I am praying fervently to center my resolve and show my care and concern for others.  I will stock up on enough essentials to care for my mother and myself as well as to assist others who will find themselves in need if disruption occurs.  
     But I am not afraid.  I have been through all of this before and I have seen how people take care of one another.  I have seen how God takes care of us too. There will be a lot of pain and we will suffer.  But we will learn and grow in the loving embrace of the source of all being and love.

PEACE OF THE FALLING AUTUMN LEAVES BE WITH YOU

It is the practice of Maryknoll Lay Missioners in Kenya 
to pray and work for peace on the first of each month.

Oct 2nd - I am praying fervently for the Trumps, and all who are infected with SARS Cov2, that they will recover quickly.  Illness can be a powerful, life changing experience.  I am much more compassionate and kind since I became ill with Sjogrens in 2009.  Please join me in prayer for their healing.