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U.S. Global Health Experts Urge G7 Action to Vaccinate the World Quickly and Equitably

By Press Release

A coalition of global health experts today called on the Group of Seven (G7) leaders to share at least 1 billion, and aim for 2 billion, vaccine doses to low- and middle-income countries by the end of this year, and more urgently help countries distribute and deliver vaccines quickly and equitably across their populations, striving to achieve at least 60%, and ideally 70%, vaccination coverage in every country in 2022.

President Biden and his G7 counterparts will meet at their annual summit on June 11-13 in the United Kingdom, and global vaccination efforts will be on their agenda.

In an Open Letter, representatives of four U.S.-based organizations – Center for Global Development, Center for Strategic & International Studies (CSIS), COVID Collaborative, and three units of Duke University – together with the endorsement of renowned global health experts – urged the G7 leaders and member states to use their vaccine expertise and manufacturing capacity to accelerate global access to vaccines while meeting domestic health needs.

The experts said that today’s global vaccine gap is a supply problem and also a massive distribution and delivery challenges. There are alarming gaps in vaccine distribution and delivery capacity across much of the world that require urgent attention and more resources. “Delivery capabilities and vaccine hesitancy, not supply, are likely to be the critical bottleneck to vaccinations in most low- and middle-income countries within the next 6 months,” the letter said.

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The letter highlighted that G7 members have unique resources and capabilities, as well as a legacy of high-impact, collaborative leadership during past crises and that the coming months are a critical period for leaders to address catastrophic outbreaks in many countries, preempt further growth of the virus elsewhere, and prevent the unchecked spread of the virus from spawning new variants that threaten everyone.

The coalition is asking the G7 leaders to adopt an action plan that includes the following initiatives:

The health experts said the G7 members are on a path to contain the pandemic in their respective countries and to meet the moment, must work to assure the fastest possible path to access to billions of doses of high-quality vaccines – and ensure local capacity to deliver them – complementing ongoing multinational efforts.

The signatories to the open letter include the following:

Amanda Glassman
Executive Vice President, Center for Global Development; CEO of CGD Europe; and Senior Fellow

Rachel Silverman
Policy Fellow, Center for Global Development

Prashant Yadav
Senior Fellow, Center for Global Development

J. Stephen Morrison
Senior Vice President and Director, Global Health Policy Center, Center for Strategic and International Studies

Katherine Bliss
Senior Fellow, Global Health Policy Center, Center for Strategic and International Studies

Anna McCaffrey
Fellow, Global Health Policy Center, Center for Strategic and International Studies

Gary Edson
President, COVID Collaborative

John Bridgeland
CEO, COVID Collaborative

Anjali Balakrishna
Program Director, COVID Collaborative

Mark McClellan
Director, Duke-Margolis Center for Health Policy, Duke University

Krishna Udayakumar
Director, Duke Global Health Innovation Center, Duke University

Michael Merson
Wolfgang Joklik Professor of Global Health, Duke Global Health Institute, Duke University

 The following individuals have formally endorsed the letter:

Thomas J Bollyky, Senior Fellow, Council on Foreign Relations

William H. Frist, former US Senate Majority Leader

Helene Gayle, President and Chief Executive Officer, The Chicago Community Trust

Scott Gottlieb, Resident Fellow, American Enterprise Institute, and former Commissioner of the US Food and Drug Administration

Margaret (Peggy) Hamburg, former Commissioner of the US Food and Drug Administration, and former Foreign Secretary of the National Academy of Medicine

Amb [ret] Jimmy Kolker, former Assistant Secretary, Global Affairs, Department of Health and Human Services

Jack Leslie, Chairman, Weber Shandwick

Jennifer Nuzzo, Associate Professor, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health

Carolyn Reynolds, Co-Founder, Pandemic Action Network, and Senior Associate, Global Health Policy Center, CSIS

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