Scientific American - USA (2022-03)

(Maropa) #1
48 Scientific American, March 2022

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and its partners designed the Access to COVID­19 Tools
(ACT) Accelerator to hasten the development and pro­
duction of, and equitable access to, COVID resources.
Yet COVAX (the ACT Accelerator’s vaccine pillar) has
badly underperformed. About 10 percent of Africa was
fully vaccinated as of mid­January, compared with
roughly 63  percent of the U.S. (the European Union
had achieved even better coverage). COVAX could be
transformative if it were properly funded and re­
sourced and if its distribution channels were strength­
ened so that vaccines could be stored, transported and
administered with speed and without waste.
President Biden has announced the investment of
billions of dollars to expand mRNA­vaccine manufac­
turing, aiming for 100 million doses a month for
domestic and global use. Yet this charitable­donation
model is deeply flawed because donations always
seem to come too little, too late. Any new internation­
al agreement must go beyond donations to plan for

Beyond funding, the WHO must have enhanced
powers to ensure governments work cooperatively in
responding to global health emergencies. Yet the goal
of enhancing the agency’s powers involves several chal­
lenges. Most countries frowned on Trump’s withdrawal
from the WHO, but many agreed that he had a legiti­
mate grievance. China’s early reporting of COVID cases
was disingenuous, causing a delay of weeks before the
world was alerted, and the country later blocked an in­
dependent investigation of SARS­CoV­2’s proximal ori­
gins. But what national leaders did not realize is that
the WHO has no power to verify a nation’s reports or
gain entry to a state’s territory for scientific investiga­
tions. These two structural weaknesses—and many
more—are the subject of intense global negotiations to
create a bold new pandemic treaty, perhaps taking ad­
vantage of the WHO’s power to adopt broad­based, le­
gally defined commitments such as the Framework
Convention on Tobacco Control.
With crisis comes opportunity, and the new pan­
demic treaty has the potential to be transformative.
It  should introduce momentous reforms even beyond
giving the WHO power to conduct independent inves­
tigations. These provisions should include adopting
a “One Health” strategy (a collaborative and transdisci­
plinary approach to achieving optimal health out­
comes) that recognizes the interconnection among
people, animals, plants and their shared environments.
The most likely origin of SARS­CoV­2 is a natural zoo­
notic spillover, the source of more than 60  percent of
emerging diseases. Separating animal and human pop­
ulations could prevent spillovers—a  step that could be
achieved through land management, reforestation and
regulation of wild animal trade and markets.
Although SARS­CoV­2 most likely reached humans
through natural means, a laboratory leak at the Wuhan
Institute of Virology has been posed as an alternative
theory for COVID’s origins. Rigorous regulation and
inspection of lab safety, as well as gain­of­function re­
search, could help prevent the unintentional or delib­
erate release of novel pathogens.
Undoubtedly the rapid development of vaccines
and therapeutics, including innovative messenger
RNA technologies, was the greatest technological suc­
cess in responding to the pandemic. But open access
and sharing of data and tools, such as real­time virus
samples, genomic sequencing, and results from clini­
cal trials and other research, were often lacking. A
new legal instrument negotiated under the auspices
of  the WHO’s constitution could provide a pipeline for
channeling significant research funding to where it is
needed while promoting public­private partnerships
and scientific cooperation.
Perhaps most important, the COVID pandemic re­
vealed massive divides based on race, ethnicity, sex,
disability and socioeconomic status at both interna­
tional and national levels. High­income countries dom­
inated global markets in diagnostics, protective equip­
ment, therapeutics and, especially, vaccines. The WHO

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