The goal is to have drug and vaccine, starting out with marne vaccines, vaccine manufacturing, dispersed throughout the global south. This hub is looking at more middle income countries where there's already some intra structure in place. And those countries would serve other countries in the region. So it's not that malowe is now going to have a vaccine hub, but if south africa did, that's very close.
Inequity has been a central feature of the COVID19 pandemic. From health outcomes to access to vaccines, COVID has pushed long-standing disparities out of the shadows and into the public eye and many of these problems are global. In this episode of Coronapod we dig into a radical new collaboration of 15 countries - co-led by the WHO, and modelled on open-science. The project, called the mRNA vaccine technology transfer hub, aims to create independent vaccine hubs that could supply the global south, and take on the giants of the pharmaceutical industry in the process. But the road ahead is long - the challenges are complex and numerous, and the odds are stacked against them. But at a time when stakes couldn't be higher, momentum is building and if successful, the tantalising possibility of an end to a dangerous legacy of dependence looms. Can it be done? And if so, what needs to change to make it happen? We ask these questions and more.
News Feature: The radical plan for vaccine equity
This project was supported by the Pulitzer Center.
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