Selangor Journal
A vial of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine and Low Dead Volume syringe is seen in this photo taken on March 9, 2021. — Picture by BERNAMA

WHO warns against overpriced vaccines, substandard Covid-19 products

GENEVA, June 8 — The World Health Organisation (WHO) warned Monday of the dangers of buying overpriced vaccines from intermediaries, reminding that countries should buy vaccines certified by the WHO and make sure to identify the origin of the product, reported Xinhua.

“We have received concerns regarding other vaccines… with intermediates selling it (one vaccine) at a much higher price than what has been actually sold by the manufacturers,” said Mariângela Batista Galvão Simão, WHO assistant director-general for Access to Medicines and Health Products, during a press conference.

The issue of the role of intermediates for buying vaccines was raised recently as a middleman, located in the United Arab Emirates, was caught selling Sputnik vaccines to Ghana and Pakistan at double the original price.

Simao said that countries should either buy directly from the manufacturer or “contact the manufacturer to make sure that the intermediate is legal.”

“There is a lot of substandard and falsified Covid products being commercialised out there, so you need to know the provenance,” she added.

Simao also said that it was important to vaccinate people with products “certified” by the WHO.

“The advice of the WHO is that the countries use vaccines that have received emergency listing,” she said, referring to the Emergency Use Listing used by the organisation to approve new vaccines.

So far, eight Covid-19 vaccines were approved by the WHO for emergency use, including two Chinese vaccines — Sinopharm and Sinovac, both of which have been distributed in several countries across the world.

— Bernama

Top Picks

Madani govt committed to eradicate hardcore poverty in Sabah, says PM Anwar

Editor Selangor Journal

TNB-QNET Selangor Hockey League back after five-year hiatus

RM1.4 mln in compounds issued for smoking offences last month — MOH