Many people in Africa are still skeptical of acquiring COVID-19 vaccine jabs due to ongoing misinformation, the African Union (AU) has lamented.
William Carew, head of the Secretariat of AU’s Economic Social and Cultural Council urged the African populace to get vaccinated if herd immunity is to be achieved.
Only some 3.6 percent of Africa’s population is fully vaccinated against COVID-19 so far.
“There has been a lot of misinformation about the COVID-19 vaccines that had contributed to many people being wary of getting vaccinated,” an AU statement issued Wednesday quoted Carew as saying.
Carew made the remarks during COVID-19 vaccines capacity building and sensitization meeting, which was held recently as part of the Council’s continental sensitization campaign aimed at promoting the accessibility and use of the COVID-19 vaccines in order to build herd immunity in Africa.
He called on Africans to implement public health experts’ assertions that vaccination remains the only realistic path to finally halting the spread of the virus given its ease of transmissibility and ability to mutate.
“I want to urge you all to take this opportunity to get the right information about the vaccines and help us to educate the communities that you operate in,” Carew told representatives of African Civil Society Organizations attending the meeting.
Last week, the World Health Organization (WHO) said that as the COVAX facility is forced to slash planned COVID-19 vaccine deliveries to Africa by around 150 million this year, the continent faces almost 500 million doses short of the global year-end target of fully vaccinating 40 percent of its population.
With the cutback, COVAX is now expected to deliver 470 million doses to Africa this year, which will be enough to vaccinate just 17 percent of the population, far below the 40 percent target.
An additional 470 million doses are needed to reach the end-year target even if all planned shipments via COVAX, a multilateral initiative aimed at guaranteeing global access to lifesaving COVID-19 vaccines, and the AU are delivered, according to the WHO.
MG/as/APA