Canada Can and Must Share Vaccines Now.
- To reduce the grossly imbalanced distribution of vaccines globally and put an end to COVID everywhere, Canada must join other wealthy countries in donating doses through COVAX.
- For every 10 Canadians who can access a dose, start sharing 1 dose with frontline health workers and vulnerable people in lower-income countries — now, not later.
Ottawa, Ontario, June 2nd, 2021 - Ahead of next week’s G7 in the UK, we call on Prime Minister Trudeau to act on his government’s stated commitment to share vaccines with COVAX — the global COVID vaccine distribution initiative — to help protect frontline health workers and people at high risk of dying from COVID-19 in lower income countries. Canada ordered far more than enough vaccines for our own needs, and sharing doses immediately will save lives and end the global pandemic sooner, while minimizing the impact on people in Canada.
COVID-19 is still spreading in many countries and producing new variants with the potential to evade our vaccines and put us all back at risk. The pandemic will not end in Canada until it ends everywhere, and that means getting enough vaccines to every country, quickly.
Dr. Tedros, the Director General of the World Health Organization (WHO), is calling for higher income countries to support a massive push to vaccinate at least 10% of every country's population by September. Canada can and must help by sharing doses in addition to the funding it has provided.
As the global mechanism for equitable access to COVID-19 vaccines, COVAX has proven it works. However, COVAX is undersupplied because wealthy countries like Canada reserved more vaccine doses than needed, while the most vulnerable in lower income countries wait. Whereas over 50% of people in Canada have received their first dose, less than 1 % have received a dose in low-income countries. The crisis in India, the world’s biggest vaccine producer, also led the Indian government to suspend exports, cutting off a big portion of COVAX’s supply. Just 77 million doses out of an initial allocation of 237 million have been shipped by COVAX to 127 economies around the world since February, covering less than 0.5% of their populations.
France, New Zealand, Sweden, Spain, Norway, and the United States have committed to start sharing vaccines while they continue their own roll-outs. By the end of June, Canada will have received 40–48 million doses, more than enough for 75% of Canadians to get a first dose and 20% to receive their second, key thresholds for re-opening plans. By August, Canada will have enough to fully vaccinate its entire population. Canada has ordered more doses per capita (more than 10) than any other country and therefore has a responsibility to share with the world.
For every 10 doses Canada will have received by the end of June, we can start by donating just 1 vaccine to COVAX for a frontline health worker or other vulnerable people. This would amount to at least 4 million doses shared. By using these doses to protect vulnerable people, Canada will slow the spread of the pandemic and future variants. After June, donations should then rapidly increase so that, by the end of the year, Canada will have donated the entirety of its expected 94 million excess doses.
Polls show a large majority of Canadians are in favour of sharing vaccines with lower-income countries. Next week, Canada can join other world leaders at the G7 and make a substantial commitment in the name of equity. This move is also essential for ending the pandemic and is supported by a majority of Canadians: share our vaccines with other countries in need.
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Signatories
- UNICEF Canada
- ONE Canada
- Global Citizen Canada
- Grandmothers Advocacy Network
- Save the Children Canada
- World Vision Canada
- Canadian Partnership for Women and Children’s Health
- Results Canada
- Anglican Church of Canada
- Engineers Without Borders
- Canadian Multifaith Federation
- Human Concern International
- Canadian Rohingya Development Initiative
- International Development and Relief Foundation
- International Academy for Multicultural Cooperation
- National Alliance for the Advancement of Pluralistic Societies
- Canadian Baptist Ministries
- Union of Medical and Relief Organizations-Canada
- La Fondation Anne Sophie Musique
- Penny Appeal Canada
- Anglican Council of Indigenous Peoples
- The Primate’s World Relief and Development Fund
- Ontario Zoroastrian Community Foundation
- Millennium Kids
- Canadian Council of Imams
- Love My Neighbour
- National Muslim Christian Liaison Committee
- Good Neighbour Project
- Mennonite Central Committee Canada
- Kairos
- Intriciti
- Canadian Society for International Health
- Canadian Coalition for Global Health Research
- People’s Health Movement Canada
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Notes to Editors:
“Canada has ordered more doses per capita (more than 10) than any other country”
- Duke Global Health Innovation Center, Tracking Covid-19 Vaccine Purchases Across the Globe
“Dr. Tedros, the Director General of the World Health Organization (WHO), is calling for high-income countries to support a massive push to vaccinate at least 10% of every country's population by September.”
- WHO Director-General's opening remarks at the World Health Assembly - 24 May 2021
“Whereas over 50% of people in Canada have received their first dose, less than 1 % have received a dose in low income countries.”
- Our World in Data
“Just 77 million doses out of an initial allocation of 237 million have been shipped by COVAX so far to participants, covering less than 0.5% of their populations.”
- UNICEF
“By the end of June, Canada will have received 40–48 million doses”
- The Globe and Mail
“Polls show a large majority of Canadians are in favour of sharing vaccines with lower-income countries.”
- UNICEF Canada, 21 April 2021
“More than 8 out of 10 Canadians agree that Canada should donate its excess doses of COVID-19 vaccines to lower-income countries once it’s secured enough doses for all Canadians.”
- A new poll commissioned by Save the Children and to be released later this week also shows a strong majority of Canadians are in favour of starting to share vaccines
About UNICEF
UNICEF is the world’s leading humanitarian organization focused on children. We work in the most challenging areas to provide protection, healthcare and immunizations, education, safe water and sanitation and nutrition. As part of the United Nations, our unrivaled reach spans more than 190 countries and territories, ensuring we are on the ground to help the most disadvantaged children. While part of the UN system, UNICEF relies entirely on voluntary donations to finance our life-saving work. Please visit unicef.ca and follow us on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram.