• Covid-19 Vaccine Doses, Once in High Demand, Now Thrown Away

    From David P.@21:1/5 to All on Sat Jul 9 23:09:59 2022
    Covid-19 Vaccine Doses, Once in High Demand, Now Thrown Away
    By Peter Loftus, July 6, 2022, WSJ

    Governments, drugmakers and vaccination sites are discarding tens of millions of unused Covid-19 vaccine doses amid sagging demand, a sharp reversal from the early days of the mass-vaccination campaign, when doses were scarce.

    Vaccine manufacturer Moderna Inc. recently discarded about 30 million doses of its Covid-19 shot after failing to find takers, while pharmacies and clinics have had to throw out unused doses from multi-dose vials from Moderna and from Pfizer Inc. and its
    partner BioNTech SE that have a short shelf life once they are opened.

    Germany’s health officials have disposed of about 3.9 million Covid-19 vaccine doses that were sitting in a federal central warehouse and expired at the end of June. Canada has disposed of 1.2 million expired doses of Moderna’s vaccine, and is set to
    throw out about 13.6 million expired doses of AstraZeneca PLC’s Covid-19 vaccine, according to the government health department.

    That so many Covid-19 doses are being discarded marks a moment in the pandemic when supply has outstripped demand.

    After an initial vaccine rollout marked by sparring among governments for limited initial supplies, drugmakers were able to increase production to meet heavy demand. Now the appetite for the shots has cooled in many places, with a majority of the global
    population fully vaccinated and a sizable minority hesitant to go ahead.

    “We are now throwing doses in the garbage,” Moderna Chief Executive Stephane Bancel said during a panel discussion at the World Economic Forum meeting in Davos, Switzerland, in May. “It’s sad to say.”

    In some low-income countries, access to doses remains an issue. Some of the countries lacked the healthcare infrastructure to handle and store the shots at low temperatures, while others had difficulty planning and rolling out vaccination campaigns
    because supplies were unpredictable and lagged behind wealthier countries.

    Demand may pick up in wealthy countries like the U.S. during the fall, when vaccine makers roll out modified shots that target Omicron subvariants and potentially provide better protection than current vaccines. On Wednesday, the U.S. government agreed
    to purchase 105 million doses of a modified vaccine from Pfizer and BioNTech for a fall booster campaign.

    Now, however, there are enough doses available to support vaccination of all adults and adolescents globally, according to Covax, an international program distributing vaccines to lower-income countries, led by the World Health Organization and other
    groups.

    Among people who are fully vaccinated, smaller percentages have opted to get booster shots, according to health authorities and drugmakers. Demand also has fallen in many lower-income countries because Omicron reduced the perceived risk of the virus,
    Covax said.

    In the U.S., about 90.6 million Covid-19 doses have been wasted, or 11.9% of the more than 762 million Covid-19 vaccine doses delivered since the shots became available in late 2020, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

    The wastage rate has accelerated recently: Some 12 million of the discarded doses have been thrown out since late May.

    The disposals come during a significant drop in demand for Covid-19 vaccines, even with young children recently becoming eligible. The seven-day moving average of doses administered daily in the U.S. was about 155,000 as of June 21, down from about 1.1
    million on Jan. 1 and the peak of about 3.5 million daily in April 2021.

    Partly driving the wastage, health experts said, is the way the Covid-19 vaccines are packaged in multiuse vials containing from five to 20 doses. Once opened, the vials generally must be used within about 12 hours of opening or the remaining doses
    discarded.

    “Wastage has risen as the number of doses you’re giving out per day goes down, as demand goes down,” said Claire Hannan, executive director of the Association of Immunization Managers, whose members lead vaccination programs in U.S. states and some
    large cities. “Then you’re apt to have more doses left in the vial at the end of the day that you have to discard.”

    That potential for wastage has made some physician practices hesitant to order doses, Ms. Hannan said, especially smaller ones in rural areas with pediatric patients who have become eligible more recently.

    State immunization managers have been telling hesitant practices that it is OK to throw out doses if it means that some children are getting vaccinated. Ms. Hannan said single-dose vials or syringes would reduce wastage, but vaccine manufacturers haven’
    t rolled them out yet.

    Pfizer, which will discard Covid-19 vaccine doses if they are nearing the end of their shelf life, is taking steps to develop a single-dose vial, a company spokeswoman said. Moderna didn’t respond to questions about the possibility of single-dose vials.

    Some doses are being discarded before they even reach clinics. Moderna, of Cambridge, Mass., recently contacted national governments to see if they could use 30 million doses, but none wanted to take them.

    “We don’t have a capacity issue around the planet,” Mr. Bancel said. “It was true two years ago, it’s not true today.” The issue now, he said, is people in many countries don’t want vaccines.

    Moderna had previously signed supply contracts with Covax, an international initiative to supply Covid-19 vaccines to low- and middle-income countries, and the African Union. Yet earlier this year, both organizations declined to order additional doses
    that Moderna had been preparing to ship later in the year, including more than 320 million doses for Covax.

    Some countries have declined deliveries because they don’t have the infrastructure in place to get shots into arms, or have low demand, according to a recent report by the consulting firm Deloitte.

    In Germany, the government’s ministry of health had been having discussions with vaccine manufacturers to see if the shelf life of the nearly 4 million doses in its warehouse could be extended and used for a booster campaign in the fall and winter, a
    ministry spokesman said. The country also looked into donations to other countries, but many aren’t accepting them.

    https://www.wsj.com/articles/covid-19-vaccine-doses-once-in-high-demand-now-thrown-away-11657105202

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From A. Filip@21:1/5 to David P. on Sun Jul 10 08:43:26 2022
    "David P." <imbibe@mindspring.com> wrote:
    Covid-19 Vaccine Doses, Once in High Demand, Now Thrown Away
    By Peter Loftus, July 6, 2022, WSJ

    Governments, drugmakers and vaccination sites are discarding tens of
    millions of unused Covid-19 vaccine doses amid sagging demand, a sharp reversal from the early days of the mass-vaccination campaign, when
    doses were scarce.

    Vaccine manufacturer Moderna Inc. recently discarded about 30 million
    doses of its Covid-19 shot after failing to find takers, while
    pharmacies and clinics have had to throw out unused doses from
    multi-dose vials from Moderna and from Pfizer Inc. and its partner
    BioNTech SE that have a short shelf life once they are opened.
    […]
    https://www.wsj.com/articles/covid-19-vaccine-doses-once-in-high-demand-now-thrown-away-11657105202

    1. Covid-19 seems to get less deadly. It is due to new less deadly
    variants or "dying out" of (very) high death risk groups.
    2. Covid-19 vaccines seem to fail to provide good protection even for
    one full flu season (6 months).
    [ AFAIR drop to 40% efficiency after 5 months ]

    Western covid-19 policies seems to be driven by number of
    hospitalizations and deaths. No hospitals overflow and not too may
    deaths => no (big) problem.

    --
    A. Filip : Big (Tech) Brother is watching you.
    | When in doubt, do it. It's much easier to apologize than to get
    | permission. (Grace Murray Hopper)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From stoney@21:1/5 to David P. on Tue Jul 12 12:55:20 2022
    On Sunday, July 10, 2022 at 2:10:01 PM UTC+8, David P. wrote:
    Covid-19 Vaccine Doses, Once in High Demand, Now Thrown Away
    By Peter Loftus, July 6, 2022, WSJ

    Governments, drugmakers and vaccination sites are discarding tens of millions of unused Covid-19 vaccine doses amid sagging demand, a sharp reversal from the early days of the mass-vaccination campaign, when doses were scarce.

    Vaccine manufacturer Moderna Inc. recently discarded about 30 million doses of its Covid-19 shot after failing to find takers, while pharmacies and clinics have had to throw out unused doses from multi-dose vials from Moderna and from Pfizer Inc. and
    its partner BioNTech SE that have a short shelf life once they are opened.

    Germany’s health officials have disposed of about 3.9 million Covid-19 vaccine doses that were sitting in a federal central warehouse and expired at the end of June. Canada has disposed of 1.2 million expired doses of Moderna’s vaccine, and is set
    to throw out about 13.6 million expired doses of AstraZeneca PLC’s Covid-19 vaccine, according to the government health department.

    That so many Covid-19 doses are being discarded marks a moment in the pandemic when supply has outstripped demand.

    After an initial vaccine rollout marked by sparring among governments for limited initial supplies, drugmakers were able to increase production to meet heavy demand. Now the appetite for the shots has cooled in many places, with a majority of the
    global population fully vaccinated and a sizable minority hesitant to go ahead.

    “We are now throwing doses in the garbage,” Moderna Chief Executive Stephane Bancel said during a panel discussion at the World Economic Forum meeting in Davos, Switzerland, in May. “It’s sad to say.”

    In some low-income countries, access to doses remains an issue. Some of the countries lacked the healthcare infrastructure to handle and store the shots at low temperatures, while others had difficulty planning and rolling out vaccination campaigns
    because supplies were unpredictable and lagged behind wealthier countries.

    Demand may pick up in wealthy countries like the U.S. during the fall, when vaccine makers roll out modified shots that target Omicron subvariants and potentially provide better protection than current vaccines. On Wednesday, the U.S. government agreed
    to purchase 105 million doses of a modified vaccine from Pfizer and BioNTech for a fall booster campaign.

    Now, however, there are enough doses available to support vaccination of all adults and adolescents globally, according to Covax, an international program distributing vaccines to lower-income countries, led by the World Health Organization and other
    groups.

    Among people who are fully vaccinated, smaller percentages have opted to get booster shots, according to health authorities and drugmakers. Demand also has fallen in many lower-income countries because Omicron reduced the perceived risk of the virus,
    Covax said.

    In the U.S., about 90.6 million Covid-19 doses have been wasted, or 11.9% of the more than 762 million Covid-19 vaccine doses delivered since the shots became available in late 2020, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

    The wastage rate has accelerated recently: Some 12 million of the discarded doses have been thrown out since late May.

    The disposals come during a significant drop in demand for Covid-19 vaccines, even with young children recently becoming eligible. The seven-day moving average of doses administered daily in the U.S. was about 155,000 as of June 21, down from about 1.1
    million on Jan. 1 and the peak of about 3.5 million daily in April 2021.

    Partly driving the wastage, health experts said, is the way the Covid-19 vaccines are packaged in multiuse vials containing from five to 20 doses. Once opened, the vials generally must be used within about 12 hours of opening or the remaining doses
    discarded.

    “Wastage has risen as the number of doses you’re giving out per day goes down, as demand goes down,” said Claire Hannan, executive director of the Association of Immunization Managers, whose members lead vaccination programs in U.S. states and
    some large cities. “Then you’re apt to have more doses left in the vial at the end of the day that you have to discard.”

    That potential for wastage has made some physician practices hesitant to order doses, Ms. Hannan said, especially smaller ones in rural areas with pediatric patients who have become eligible more recently.

    State immunization managers have been telling hesitant practices that it is OK to throw out doses if it means that some children are getting vaccinated. Ms. Hannan said single-dose vials or syringes would reduce wastage, but vaccine manufacturers haven
    t rolled them out yet.

    Pfizer, which will discard Covid-19 vaccine doses if they are nearing the end of their shelf life, is taking steps to develop a single-dose vial, a company spokeswoman said. Moderna didn’t respond to questions about the possibility of single-dose
    vials.

    Some doses are being discarded before they even reach clinics. Moderna, of Cambridge, Mass., recently contacted national governments to see if they could use 30 million doses, but none wanted to take them.

    “We don’t have a capacity issue around the planet,” Mr. Bancel said. “It was true two years ago, it’s not true today.” The issue now, he said, is people in many countries don’t want vaccines.

    Moderna had previously signed supply contracts with Covax, an international initiative to supply Covid-19 vaccines to low- and middle-income countries, and the African Union. Yet earlier this year, both organizations declined to order additional doses
    that Moderna had been preparing to ship later in the year, including more than 320 million doses for Covax.

    Some countries have declined deliveries because they don’t have the infrastructure in place to get shots into arms, or have low demand, according to a recent report by the consulting firm Deloitte.

    In Germany, the government’s ministry of health had been having discussions with vaccine manufacturers to see if the shelf life of the nearly 4 million doses in its warehouse could be extended and used for a booster campaign in the fall and winter, a
    ministry spokesman said. The country also looked into donations to other countries, but many aren’t accepting them.

    https://www.wsj.com/articles/covid-19-vaccine-doses-once-in-high-demand-now-thrown-away-11657105202

    Few months ago, WHO mentioned that there were not enough of dozes to reach out to some African countries. If these African countries still need them, it would be waste to throw the vaccine away. The best way is to evaluate and test out whether the shelf
    life of vaccine can be extended for use as first and second boosters for them. Better have something to standby for them than nothing for them. These countries should be given infrastructural help to build chilled storage vault rooms to keep vaccines
    chilled and storage them under lock and key.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From borie@21:1/5 to David P. on Wed Jul 13 00:34:05 2022
    On Sunday, July 10, 2022 at 2:10:01 PM UTC+8, David P. wrote:
    Covid-19 Vaccine Doses, Once in High Demand, Now Thrown Away
    By Peter Loftus, July 6, 2022, WSJ

    Governments, drugmakers and vaccination sites are discarding tens of millions of unused Covid-19 vaccine doses amid sagging demand, a sharp reversal from the early days of the mass-vaccination campaign, when doses were scarce.

    Vaccine manufacturer Moderna Inc. recently discarded about 30 million doses of its Covid-19 shot after failing to find takers, while pharmacies and clinics have had to throw out unused doses from multi-dose vials from Moderna and from Pfizer Inc. and
    its partner BioNTech SE that have a short shelf life once they are opened.

    Germany’s health officials have disposed of about 3.9 million Covid-19 vaccine doses that were sitting in a federal central warehouse and expired at the end of June. Canada has disposed of 1.2 million expired doses of Moderna’s vaccine, and is set
    to throw out about 13.6 million expired doses of AstraZeneca PLC’s Covid-19 vaccine, according to the government health department.

    That so many Covid-19 doses are being discarded marks a moment in the pandemic when supply has outstripped demand.

    After an initial vaccine rollout marked by sparring among governments for limited initial supplies, drugmakers were able to increase production to meet heavy demand. Now the appetite for the shots has cooled in many places, with a majority of the
    global population fully vaccinated and a sizable minority hesitant to go ahead.

    “We are now throwing doses in the garbage,” Moderna Chief Executive Stephane Bancel said during a panel discussion at the World Economic Forum meeting in Davos, Switzerland, in May. “It’s sad to say.”

    In some low-income countries, access to doses remains an issue. Some of the countries lacked the healthcare infrastructure to handle and store the shots at low temperatures, while others had difficulty planning and rolling out vaccination campaigns
    because supplies were unpredictable and lagged behind wealthier countries.

    Demand may pick up in wealthy countries like the U.S. during the fall, when vaccine makers roll out modified shots that target Omicron subvariants and potentially provide better protection than current vaccines. On Wednesday, the U.S. government agreed
    to purchase 105 million doses of a modified vaccine from Pfizer and BioNTech for a fall booster campaign.

    Now, however, there are enough doses available to support vaccination of all adults and adolescents globally, according to Covax, an international program distributing vaccines to lower-income countries, led by the World Health Organization and other
    groups.

    Among people who are fully vaccinated, smaller percentages have opted to get booster shots, according to health authorities and drugmakers. Demand also has fallen in many lower-income countries because Omicron reduced the perceived risk of the virus,
    Covax said.

    In the U.S., about 90.6 million Covid-19 doses have been wasted, or 11.9% of the more than 762 million Covid-19 vaccine doses delivered since the shots became available in late 2020, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

    The wastage rate has accelerated recently: Some 12 million of the discarded doses have been thrown out since late May.

    The disposals come during a significant drop in demand for Covid-19 vaccines, even with young children recently becoming eligible. The seven-day moving average of doses administered daily in the U.S. was about 155,000 as of June 21, down from about 1.1
    million on Jan. 1 and the peak of about 3.5 million daily in April 2021.

    Partly driving the wastage, health experts said, is the way the Covid-19 vaccines are packaged in multiuse vials containing from five to 20 doses. Once opened, the vials generally must be used within about 12 hours of opening or the remaining doses
    discarded.

    “Wastage has risen as the number of doses you’re giving out per day goes down, as demand goes down,” said Claire Hannan, executive director of the Association of Immunization Managers, whose members lead vaccination programs in U.S. states and
    some large cities. “Then you’re apt to have more doses left in the vial at the end of the day that you have to discard.”

    That potential for wastage has made some physician practices hesitant to order doses, Ms. Hannan said, especially smaller ones in rural areas with pediatric patients who have become eligible more recently.

    State immunization managers have been telling hesitant practices that it is OK to throw out doses if it means that some children are getting vaccinated. Ms. Hannan said single-dose vials or syringes would reduce wastage, but vaccine manufacturers haven
    t rolled them out yet.

    Pfizer, which will discard Covid-19 vaccine doses if they are nearing the end of their shelf life, is taking steps to develop a single-dose vial, a company spokeswoman said. Moderna didn’t respond to questions about the possibility of single-dose
    vials.

    Some doses are being discarded before they even reach clinics. Moderna, of Cambridge, Mass., recently contacted national governments to see if they could use 30 million doses, but none wanted to take them.

    “We don’t have a capacity issue around the planet,” Mr. Bancel said. “It was true two years ago, it’s not true today.” The issue now, he said, is people in many countries don’t want vaccines.

    Moderna had previously signed supply contracts with Covax, an international initiative to supply Covid-19 vaccines to low- and middle-income countries, and the African Union. Yet earlier this year, both organizations declined to order additional doses
    that Moderna had been preparing to ship later in the year, including more than 320 million doses for Covax.

    Some countries have declined deliveries because they don’t have the infrastructure in place to get shots into arms, or have low demand, according to a recent report by the consulting firm Deloitte.

    In Germany, the government’s ministry of health had been having discussions with vaccine manufacturers to see if the shelf life of the nearly 4 million doses in its warehouse could be extended and used for a booster campaign in the fall and winter, a
    ministry spokesman said. The country also looked into donations to other countries, but many aren’t accepting them.

    https://www.wsj.com/articles/covid-19-vaccine-doses-once-in-high-demand-now-thrown-away-11657105202

    If the shelf life of excess quantities of vaccine can be prolonged, it could be modified to add in with another vaccine to deal with Omicron BA5. The excess vaccine can also be used together with another vaccine strain to deal with the Omicron BA.5.

    By this way, throwing away bottles of Covid vaccine will not be wasted if they could modified to treat new variant BA5.. If they could be prolonged by nitrogen freezing, they could be used for new test development of new vaccine with other new treatments,
    too.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)