Health
Pfizer-BioNTech’s bivalent Covid-19 vaccine to arrive next week
COVAX facility will supply 500,000 doses each in three tranches, on February 13, 16 and possibly on 23.Post Report
The Ministry of Health and Population has said that COVAX facility will supply Pfizer-BioNTech’s Covid-19 bivalent vaccine from next week only. Officials said vaccine doses supplied by the United Nations-backed international vaccine sharing scheme will arrive only on February 13.
“First lot of vaccine doses will arrive on February 13 and the second shipment is scheduled for February 16,” said Sagar Dahal, chief of the Immunisation Section at the Family Welfare Division under the Department of Health Services. “500,000 doses of vaccine will come in each lot, the flight schedule of the third lot has not yet come but we hope that it will arrive by February 23.”
The health ministry has been planning to use vaccine doses as booster shots (both first and second) throughout the country.
“We will use the vaccine doses as booster shots,” said Dahal. “Those who have not yet taken booster shots can get the jabs and the second booster shots will be administered to people of a specified age group and high-risk populations.”
Pfizer-BioNTech’s is the only bivalent jab that has got an emergency use approval from the Drug Advisory Committee. A meeting of the committee last month granted emergency use authorisation to the bivalent vaccine.
The bivalent Covid-19 vaccine includes a component of the original virus strain as well as a part of the Omicron variant to provide a broad protection against Covid-19.
The vaccine is called bivalent Covid-19 shot as it contains two components—original virus strain and Omicron BA.4 and BA.5 sub-variants. Doctors say a bivalent Covid-19 vaccine may also be referred to as an “updated” Covid-19 vaccine booster dose.
Health ministry officials said that the bivalent vaccines are part of the 9.2 million doses promised to Nepal by COVAX, the United Nations-backed international vaccine sharing scheme. The facility has supplied around three million doses so far.
The health ministry has also requested the COVAX facility to supply an additional 1.5 million doses of bivalent vaccine after delivering the first 1.5 million doses.
The uptake of Covid-19 vaccine has declined following a drop in infection rate after the third wave of the pandemic driven by the Omicron variant in January last year. Health authorities had launched a booster drive a year ago on January 17, only after a new wave of the virus hit the country. So far, 7,972,791 people have been administered the booster shots, according to the ministry.
Public health experts say authorities should start their preparations to increase vaccine uptake.
Months ago, the health ministry had decided to administer the second booster shots to vulnerable groups—people above 55 years old, those having compromised immunity and frontline health workers. However, their vaccinations have yet to start for various reasons, including the lack of doses and official lethargy.
Nepal so far has used Covid-19 vaccines developed by the University of Oxford and the pharmaceutical giant AstraZeneca, manufactured in various countries of Europe, India and Japan, the Chinese Vero Cell, and the US-made Janssen, Moderna, and Pfizer-BioNTech.
So far, 12,020 Covid-related deaths have been reported in Nepal, according to the official count. The health ministry said as many as 22,324,933 people, or 76.5 percent of the total population, have been fully vaccinated.