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Letter: Canada's handling of COVID-19 vaccines is a national shame

Should Canada do more to help other countries access the vaccine?
COVID-19 vaccine
A senior male is about to receive a COVID-19 coronavirus vaccine. - Photograph via Getty Images

Editor:

World Immunization week (April 24-30) reminds me how very fortunate I am to live where ample vaccines are available to fight COVID-19. 

Others are not so privileged.

It is time to end global vaccine inequity - 2.8 billion people, largely in low- and middle- income countries, remain completely unvaccinated against COVID-19.   Northern wealthy nations have been able to pay the high prices to Pfizer and Moderna.

While 80% of Canadians have received two doses of the COVID-19 vaccine, just 15% of people in the Global South have received one dose. Ending global vaccine inequity must become a priority to put an end to this pandemic.

COVID-19 has had a devastating impact on marginalized communities around the world: 80 million people have gone into extreme poverty; education has been disrupted and many young girls may never return to school and basic health-care progress has been set back years. Global vaccination will reduce the risk of future COVID-19 variants, which threaten everyone.

Canada promised to send 200 million doses of COVID-19 vaccine to needy nations.  So far, it has sent only 15 million. We sit at the bottom of the G7 countries in our efforts. It is embarrassing.

Furthermore, Canada could show its commitment to a COVID-free world by joining the more than 100 governments at the World Trade Organization that fully support the proposed suspension of intellectual property barriers that would allow increased manufacturing of COVID vaccines in low and middle-income countries (the TRIPS waiver).

I urge all Canadians to push our government to do the right thing and reduce vaccine inequities.

Gail Mullan, Coquitlam