Nigeria
is expected to receive its first 4 million doses of COVID-19 vaccines next week
from the global COVAX vaccine programme for poor and middle-income countries,
the head of the World Health Organization (WHO) mission in Nigeria said on
Friday.
WHO
representative in Nigeria, Walter Kazadi Mulombo told a briefing by video link
that Nigeria was expecting 14 million doses in total.
Chikwe
Ihekweazu, Director General of the Nigeria Centre for Disease Control, said the
situation in Nigeria was so far much better than had been widely predicted
early in the outbreak.
Nigeria,
Africa’s most populous country with some 200 million people, has reported fewer
than 1,900 COVID-19 deaths so far, and WHO officials at the briefing praised
its response.
“The
whole world expected the continent of Africa, and Nigeria with our social and
economic realities, to basically fall apart,” Ihekweazu told the briefing, also
by video link.
He
said seroprevalence studies in four Nigerian states had shown a larger number
of mild cases, but that serious illness appeared to be rarer than feared,
possibly in part because of the young average age of the population.
“Getting
the vaccine into Nigeria will serve the continent well, will serve the world well,”
he said.
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