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Covid vaccines can be used three months after expiry - WHO

More than one billion doses of coronavirus vaccines have been administered worldwide, less than five months after the first mass inoculation programmes began to be rolled out. PHOTO/FILE

What you need to know:

  • However, Ministry of Health warns that cases might rise in the months of June and July if the public does not adhere to Covid-19 precautions.
  • Uganda has recorded 41,715 cases, 40,989 recoveries and 341 deaths.


The World Health Organisation (WHO) has revealed that AstraZeneca Covid-19 vaccine is still effective three months after the expiry date.
Dr Yonas Woldemariam, the WHO country representative, said research has showed that the vaccine has more lifespan than what is indicated on the bottle (Vial).

“I know the question of expiry date of the vaccine has come forward. One of the issues about this vaccine is that it is new and every day we learn. If you remember a few years back, we used to say the yellow fever vaccine only works for 10 years and now we say it is forever. The same way, science is telling us that at least the vaccine has an additional three months lifespan,” Dr Woldemariam said yesterday during an engagement meeting with the leadership of health professionals on Covid-19 vaccination.

Recently, some African countries such as South Sudan and Malawi indicated that they would destroy more than 70,000 doses of the Oxford-AstraZeneca jab because they expired in mid-April. 

Uganda received 964,000 doses of the AstraZeneca vaccine through the Covax global sharing initiative and a donation from the Indian government in March. However, the uptake of the vaccine has been low. 

A total of 276,306 people had received their first Covid-19 jab as of yesterday.

Officials at the Ministry of Health said the vaccines are due to expire by July.  But Dr Woldemariam said the focus should be on drumming up support for more people to get vaccinated given the emergence of dangerous variants.
“The more this virus is circulating, the more danger we have of the variants. I am more worried about people who are not vaccinated,” he said.

A Kenyan woman receives the first injection of the Oxford/AstraZeneca Covid-19 vaccine during the launch of the vaccination campaign for 5000 frontline workers in the tourism and hospitality sector in Nairobi county at the Kenyatta International Convention Centre (KICC) in Nairobi, Kenya, on April 21, 2021. Covid-19 cases have topped 4.47 million on the African continental block. PHOTO/AFP 

 

According to Ministry of Health, 703,520 (70 per cent) vaccine doses were issued to the districts but 276,306 (39 per cent) have been used.
Dr Richard Idro, the president of Uganda Medical Association, said the vaccination uptake among health workers is low compared to what was expected. 

Dr Diana Atwine, the Permanent Secretary at the Health ministry, said more sensitisation needs to be done among health workers and the public to prevent negative information associated with the vaccines.

The Ministry of Health has warned that cases might rise in the months of June and July if the public does not adhere to Covid-19 precautions. Uganda has recorded 41,715 cases, 40,989 recoveries and 341 deaths.

Dr Atwine said the public should not be worried about the availability of the second dose as they are in touch with the Covax facility and more doses are expected in the country in May or early June.