The WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus warned about the Delta Variant, he said Delta variant is ripping around the world at a scorching pace, driving a new spike in cases and deaths, the variant is now in present over 104 countries, is expected to soon be a dominant strain of COVID-19 circulating across the globe.
While addressing a press briefing on Monday, he said that last week was marked as the fourth consecutive week of increasing cases of coronavirus globally, with increases recorded in all but one of WHO’s six regions, adding with concern that after 10 weeks of declines, deaths are increasing again.
“The Delta variant is ripping around the world at a scorching pace, driving a new spike in cases and death,” the Director-General of the World Health Organisation said. “Delta is now in more than 104 countries and we expect it to soon be the dominant COVID-19 strain circulating worldwide,” he said adding that the world is watching in real-time as the COVID-19 virus continues to change and become more transmissible.
He highlighted that the world should battle together to put out this pandemic inferno everywhere and said, “My message today is that we are experiencing a worsening public health emergency that further threatens lives, livelihoods and a sound global economic recovery. It is definitely worse in places that have very few vaccines, but the pandemic is not over anywhere.”
Noting that as the Delta variant spreads, not everywhere is taking the same hit, the WHO chief said “we’re in the midst of a growing two-track pandemic where the haves and have-nots within and between countries are increasingly divergent.”
Delta variant was first detected in India and is spreading quickly in places with high vaccination coverage, “especially infecting unprotected and vulnerable people and steadily putting pressure back on health systems.”
He warned that the situation is “particularly bad” in countries with low vaccine coverage. He also stressed that Delta and other highly transmissible variants are driving catastrophic waves of cases, which are decoding into high numbers of hospitalisations and death.
“Even countries that successfully managed to ward off the early waves of the virus, through public health measures alone, are now in the midst of devastating outbreaks.”
Ghebreyesus emphasized that for more than a year health workers have been in a “titanic battle” and have record waiting lists to attend to, increased hospitalisations at any level is a challenge to them and their patients and to the overall capacity of the health system.
Ghebreyesus also underlined that while vaccines have never been the way out of this crisis “on their own”, this current wave is demonstrating again just what a powerful tool they are to battle back against this virus. He said some countries and regions are actually ordering millions of booster doses before other countries have had supplies to vaccinate their health workers and the most vulnerable. At the same time, he voiced his concern about the global gap in vaccine supply is hugely uneven and inequitable.
“I ask you, who would put firefighters on the frontline without protection? Who are the most vulnerable to the flames of this pandemic? The health workers on the frontlines, older persons, and the vulnerable,” he said.
Reiterating that vaccination offers long-lasting immunity against severe and deadly COVID-19, the WHO chief said the priority now must be to vaccinate those who have received no doses and protection.
“Instead of Moderna and Pfizer prioritizing the supply of vaccines as boosters to countries whose populations have relatively high coverage, we need them to go all out to channel supply to COVAX, the Africa Vaccine Acquisition Task Team, and low- and low-middle income countries, which have very low vaccine coverage,” he said.
While tens of millions of vaccine dose donations are starting to come through, he said there is a need for more and faster.
“We need an all-out, no regrets, accelerated building up of new vaccine manufacturing hubs. For that to happen quicker, pharmaceutical companies must share their licenses, know-how and technology,” he said.
AstraZeneca has led on licensing their vaccines around the world to increase vaccine capacity quickly. “As well as Europe, India and the Republic of Korea, I am pleased to announce two more manufacturing sites, in Japan and Australia, which have now received a WHO Emergency Use Listing, bringing AstraZeneca’s EUL’s to five,” he said adding that this gives the green light for COVAX to buy vaccines from these additional facilities, and enables countries to expedite their own regulatory approval to import and roll out vaccines.