Site icon Nairametrics

WHO admits huge funding gap in pandemic fight, reveals amount needed for vaccine

WHO insists that recently approved NAFDAC malaria vaccine still needs more trials

WHO Director-General, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus

The World Health Organization (WHO) has disclosed that there is a huge gap between funds that are required to fight the Coronavirus pandemic and the funds that are actually available.

The UN health agency revealed that they have about 10% of the needed funds.

This disclosure was made by the Director-General of WHO, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, during a briefing in Geneva on Monday.

READ ALSO: 3 major ways COVID-19 will affect Banks’ 2020 profits

Tedros, while referring to the access to Covid-19 tools said, “The coming three months present a crucial window of opportunity to scale-up the impact of the ACT Accelerator for global impact.

“However to exploit this window, we have to fundamentally scale up the way we are funding the ACT Accelerator and prioritise the use of new tools. There is a vast global gap between our ambition for the ACT Accelerator, and the amount of funds that have been committed.

He disclosed that the WHO is only 10% close to funding the billions of dollars required.

READ ALSO: COVID-19: WHO expects a lengthy pandemic that will be felt for decades

Tedros also noted that over $100 billion would be needed for the vaccines alone. He said that although the amount might appear huge, it is small when compared to the $10 trillion that had already been spent by G20 countries in fiscal stimulus to deal with the consequences of the pandemic so far.

Going further, Tedros said, “It is never too late to turn the pandemic around. The message is to “suppress, suppress, suppress.”

READ MORE: Konga’s turnover increases by 800%, as company claims to be self-sufficient

Also commenting on the situation, the head of WHO’s emergencies programme, Dr. Mike Ryan, said the Coronavirus is simple, brutal, and cruel.

About 20 million positive cases of the Coronavirus pandemic, have been reported globally, with about 730,000 fatalities. The WHO had said that over 150 vaccines are currently on different phases of the trial.

Exit mobile version