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UK and India to accelerate collaboration on vaccines to prevent future pandemics

UK and India to accelerate collaboration on vaccines to prevent future pandemics English From: 16 December 2020 Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab speaks to a Indian vaccine health worker during his visit in New Delhi. Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab met Prime Minister Narendra Modi today to welcome the UK and India’s collaboration on tackling coronavirus new virtual UK-India vaccines hub announced to help in shared fight against coronavirus the Foreign Secretary praised Prime Minister Modi’s commitment to equitable global access to vaccines Experts from India and the UK will join forces through a new virtual hub to deliver vaccines for coronavirus and other deadly viruses, the UK Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab announced in India today (Wednesday 16 December).

With First Dibs on Vaccines, Rich Countries Have Cleared the Shelves But There s Some Good News for India

As a growing number of coronavirus vaccines advance through clinical trials, wealthy countries are fueling an extraordinary gap in access around the world, laying claim to more than half the doses that could come on the market by the end of next year. While many poor nations may be able to vaccinate at most 20% of their populations in 2021, some of the world’s richest countries have reserved enough doses to immunize their own multiple times over. With no guarantee that any particular vaccine would come through, these countries hedged their bets on a number of candidates. But if all the doses they have claimed are delivered, the European Union could inoculate its residents twice, Britain and the United States could do so four times over, and Canada six times over, according to a New York Times analysis of data on vaccine contracts collected by Duke University, UNICEF and Airfinity, a science analytics company.

With first dibs on vaccines, rich countries have cleared the shelves

Megan Twohey, Keith Collins and Katie Thomas, The New York Times Published: 16 Dec 2020 01:05 AM BdST Updated: 16 Dec 2020 01:33 AM BdST Nathan Aamodt, left, documents Tim Ostgarden unload the COVID-19 vaccine at Sanford Health in Fargo, N.D., on Monday, Dec. 14, 2020. The first shots were given in the American mass vaccination campaign on Monday morning, opening a new chapter in the battle against the coronavirus pandemic, which has killed more people in the United States than in any other country.(Tim Gruber/The New York Times) As a growing number of coronavirus vaccines advance through clinical trials, wealthy countries are fuelling an extraordinary gap in access around the world, laying claim to more than half the doses that could come on the market by the end of next year.

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