A regularly updated examination on how countries are rolling out vaccination programs.
The emergency authorizations of several COVID-19 vaccines late last year and early this year led the world to its next phase of the pandemic: getting these novel shots into arms worldwide. That progress has been uneven, even with global partnerships to assist in distributing vaccines to lower-income countries. This map shows the vaccination inequity between high-income countries and the rest of the world. It also depicts a striking vaccination divide by continent.
Percent of population at least partially vaccinated
One such partnership, COVAX, kicked off last September. A year later, the consortium had distributed 240 million doses to 139 countries, but international access to vaccines has remained inequitable.
In a Sept. 8 joint statement, members of the partnership said, "[T]he global picture of access to COVID-19 vaccines is unacceptable." At the time, just one-fifth of people in low- and lower-middle income countries had received their first dose of the vaccine, while in higher-income-level countries, 80% had received a dose. The disparity is even more stark when examining just low-income countries. Roughly just 2%of people in the developing world have received at least one dose, according to Our World in Data, an online publication whose research team is based at the University of Oxford.
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