Published: 14:57, December 14, 2020 | Updated: 08:16, June 5, 2023
PDF View
Beware of holidays, says WHO chief
By Chen Weihua in Brussels

This handout picture taken and released by the World Health Organization on Oct 5, 2020 shows World Health Organization (WHO) Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus attending a special session on COVID-19 response held by the WHO executive board at the health agency's headquarters in Geneva. (CHRISTOPHER BLACK / WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION / AFP)

The World Health Organization on Friday urged people to exercise caution in the coming holiday season and pleaded with governments to give more money to a vaccine facility launched by the UN agency.

WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said that the festival season is ordinarily a time for people to relax and celebrate.

"But we must not relax our guard," he said at a virtual news conference from Geneva.

The WHO chief asked people to consider their plans carefully if they prepare to celebrate over the coming weeks, and they should take every precaution to keep themselves and others safe if they live in an area with high virus transmission

The WHO has reported the number of weekly deaths in the past six weeks has increased by about 60 percent, and most new cases and deaths are in Europe and the Americas.

"Celebration can very quickly turn to mourning if we fail to take the right precautions," Tedros warned.

ALSO READ: Backsliding worries WHO after progress

He asked people to consider their plans carefully if they prepare to celebrate over the coming weeks, and they should take every precaution to keep themselves and others safe if they live in an area with high virus transmission. "That could be the best gift you could give-the gift of health, life, love, joy and hope," he said.

Maria Van Kerkhove, the WHO's technical lead on COVID-19, echoed his views, saying people need to follow through on all the precaution measures.

She warned that it is easy for the number of cases to go up but it takes a while for the number to go down.

Van Kerkhove, a US epidemiologist, said she will celebrate this year's holiday via the Zoom conferencing platform.

READ MORE: Germany to impose stricter lockdown to battle COVID-19

Tedros applauded a vaccine rollout in the United Kingdom and said he expects more countries to follow suit.

Filling the gap

He said that the greater achievement would be to ensure all countries enjoy the benefits of science equitably, but the global health agency faces an immediate funding gap of US$4.3 billion to procure vaccines for the most needy countries.

I urge donors to fill this gap quickly so that vaccines can be secured, lives can be saved and a truly global economic recovery is accelerated.

Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, WHO director-general

"I urge donors to fill this gap quickly so that vaccines can be secured, lives can be saved and a truly global economic recovery is accelerated," he said.

He said world leaders have made a commitment for equitable access to vaccines, and he hopes to see commitment being translated into action.

READ MORE: Virus: Inoculations set to begin in US as toll nears 300,000

The WHO-led COVAX vaccine facility, which is backed by 189 countries and economies but not the United States, has secured almost 1 billion doses of three candidate vaccines.

However, some drugmakers have encountered obstacles with their vaccines.

On Friday, GlaxoSmithKline and Sanofi announced that the rollout of their jointly developed coronavirus vaccine will be pushed back after it failed to show a sufficient efficacy rate in older patients.

The plan is to delay the vaccine until the fourth quarter of 2021, instead of an earlier plan to roll it out in the year's first half.

Bruce Aylward, senior adviser to Tedros, said that COVID-19 vaccines have offered hope and let people see the light at the end of the tunnel.

"It's a long tunnel," said the Canadian physician-epidemiologist, referring to the challenges of distributing the vaccines to the wider population in the world and the still unsettled epidemiological situation of the novel coronavirus.

chenweihua@chinadaily.com.cn