US to gift 2.5m Moderna vaccines to Bangladesh

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News Desk :
The United States will provide Bangladesh 2.5 million doses of the coronavirus vaccine developed by American biotech company Moderna, as gift.
US Ambassador to Bangladesh Earl Miller tweeted the news on Saturday afternoon.
Earl Miller writes in his Twitter: “I am pleased to announce that Bangladesh will soon receive a gift of 2.5 million doses of Moderna COVID-19 vaccine from the American people via GAVI. As the largest contributor to #COVAX, the U.S. is committed to increasing the country’s vaccine supply to beat the pandemic here and worldwide.”
Health Minister Zahid Maleque said on Friday that the vaccine doses would arrive within seven to 10 days under the global vaccine-sharing programme COVAX.
The government agreed to receive the doses following a proposal by the COVAX platform, co-led by the World Health Organization.
“This is very good news at this moment,” Maleque said.
This will be the second batch of vaccine for Bangladesh under COVAX, which is expected to give the country 68 million doses, with two shots per person, to cover 20 per cent of the population.
The first batch of 1,00,620 Pfizer-BioNTech doses under COVAX arrived on May 31 and Bangladesh on Jun 21 began administering the first doses of the vaccine experimentally.
With an efficacy rate of over 94 per cent in trials, the Moderna vaccine uses the same mRNA technology as Pfizer’s shot but can be stored at normal fridge temperatures once thawed from a frozen state. Pfizer vaccine must be stored and shipped at ultra-cool temperatures.
With limited cold chain facilities, Bangladesh is administering Pfizer at a few centres in Dhaka.
The Moderna vaccine, developed in partnership with the US National Institutes of Health, is administered in two shots 28 days apart.
It has relatively minor side effects including pain around the injection site and swelling, but the US Food and Drug Administration recently said it plans to add a warning about rare cases of heart inflammation in adolescents and young adults to fact sheets for the Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna shots.
Maleque said the government is also expecting a big batch of vaccine from China. He did not reveal the volume of the batch and the arrival date.
“There was a problem with China, now it’s over. We hope we will get some vaccines within a few days. I can’t tell you the volume, but I hope the number will be good.”

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