Gates Foundation pledges $50 mn for equitable vaccine access

By IANS | Published: June 2, 2021 08:51 PM2021-06-02T20:51:03+5:302021-06-02T21:10:23+5:30

San Francisco, June 2 The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation on Wednesday pledged $50 million to Gavi, the ...

Gates Foundation pledges $50 mn for equitable vaccine access | Gates Foundation pledges $50 mn for equitable vaccine access

Gates Foundation pledges $50 mn for equitable vaccine access

San Francisco, June 2 The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation on Wednesday pledged $50 million to Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance, to increase access to safe and affordable Covid-19 vaccines in 92 lower-income countries.

The foundation also called for high-income countries to share at least 1 billion excess Covid-19 doses with lower-income countries this year to accelerate global vaccine access and save lives.

The pledge was announced at Gavi's COVAX AMC Summit, co-hosted by the government of Japan and Gavi.

"The world must urgently come together to expand equitable access to Covid-19 vaccines, or we risk more deaths and the emergence of new variants that could prolong the pandemic for everyone," Foundation CEO Mark Suzman said.

High-income countries have reserved more Covid-19 vaccines than they need, and thus can be part of a critical effort to accelerate global vaccine access by sharing excess doses, without compromising their own vaccination efforts.

This will allow lower-income countries to immunise hundreds of millions of health workers and at-risk people this year saving lives, reducing the risk of new variants emerging, and helping control the pandemic, the foundation said in a statement.

The latest announcement builds on $156 million in previous commitments by the foundation to the COVAX AMC.

The foundation's total commitment to the Covid-19 response is now more than $1.8 billion.

The COVAX AMC is part of the vaccines pillar of the Access to COVID-19 Tools (ACT) Accelerator and is co-led by Gavi, the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations, and the World Health Organisation (WHO).

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

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