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A People’s Vaccine for Refugees: Ensuring access to COVID-19 vaccines for refugees and other displaced people

Pays
Monde
Sources
Oxfam
Date de publication
Origine
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INTRODUCTION

COVID-19 has had a devastating impact on people’s health and livelihoods in almost every country in the world. We know that the only way out of this pandemic is for everyone, everywhere to have equitable and swift access to vaccines. To do this, we need to take active steps to ensure that no groups are excluded from vaccine coverage – because no one is safe until everyone is safe.

In addition to the vast gaps in access to vaccines between high-income and lower-income nations, refugees and other people in displacement contexts – including asylum seekers, internally displaced persons (IDPs), stateless people and those displaced by disaster or climate change – face additional barriers to accessing vaccines. It is vital that governments understand and address these specific challenges so that these people are not left behind in receiving desperately needed vaccines.

Displaced people are often particularly vulnerable to the risks of COVID-191 – as a result of living in crowded camps or shared housing, lacking access to water, sanitation and hygiene and/or health services, or working in essential jobs which expose them to greater risks – and evidence suggests that they are likely to face significant challenges in accessing essential services or protection as a result of the pandemic.2 Yet displaced people are often last in line for vaccination.

THE NEED FOR GLOBAL VACCINE EQUITY AND EQUITABLE VACCINE ROLL-OUT

For most people in displacement contexts, there are simply not enough vaccines available in the places where they are hosted: 85% of refugees are hosted in lower- and middle-income countries, while in the first six months of this year 85% of vaccines went to wealthy countries; lower- and middle income countries have still received only a fraction of the vaccine doses they require.3 Shortages in these countries can also pose particular risks to vaccination campaigns aimed at displaced populations, as they can result in them being deprioritized.

So, the very first step in achieving equitable access to vaccines for displaced people must be ensuring that lower- and middle-income countries have enough doses of vaccine for both displaced populations and the communities who host them. It is also critical to invest in vaccine delivery systems to ensure that these vaccines make it into people’s arms, including equitable roll-out in the last mile.