Hoard

Stat reported that rich countries like America have stockpiled far more vaccines that they can use while other nations have yet to get a first dose of any COVID vaccine out to the population. Part of the problem is that drug companies manufacturing the vaccines want to make a hearty profit. In America a shot of vaccine now costs $130.

Even if everyone in America were to get the recommended booster shot (which they will not) there is still plenty of vaccine to help other nations stop the spread of the virus. Any country which remains vaccinated becomes a breeding ground for future variants which could be more deadly ohave a greater ability to evade immunity.

About 11 billion doses of COVID vaccine have been manufactured but they are nor all being distributed. Only 7.1% of vaccines have been distributed to low income countries. The first Omicron wave came from low income South Africa. The biggest obstacle to global supply is in the stockpiles of excess vaccines that wealthier countries are holding onto. Hoarding vaccines allows the virus to mutate and spread unchecked and then return to America to infect the un-vaccinated and vaccinated alike.

The United States and Switzerland have allowed countries in dire need to take newly created vaccines first. However this is not enough to meet the demand. Distribution is often more expensive than the vaccines themselves. Nigeria recently was unable to use 1 million Covid-19 vaccines, according to Reuters, largely due to a rollout that’s limited by shortage of funds and staff.

The hardest step is always getting shots in arms.

Norway Omicron Superspreader

A company Christmas party is Oslo Norway became the sire of an Omicron superspreader event. Up to 60 people may have been infected at the company party held at Louise Restaurant & Bar at Aker Brygge. 13 of the infections so far have been confirmed to be the Omicron variant.

The Nov. 26, 2021 outbreak took place at a Christmas party organized by renewable energy company Scatec, which has operations in South Africa where the variant was first detected.

At least one employee had just returned from South Africa. All the attendees were fully vaccinated and had tested negative before the event.

Preben Aavitsland, a senior physician at the Norwegian Institute of Public Health, told Reuters by email, “Our working hypothesis is that at least half of the 120 participants were infected with the Omicron variant during the party. This makes this, for now, the largest Omicron outbreak outside South Africa.”

Health authorities said the individuals infected were so far displaying mild symptoms, with none hospitalized.”It is still too early to say whether the clinical picture of the disease is different in Omicron infections than in Delta infections,” Aavitsland said.

The outbreak led the Norwegian government to reintroduce some nationwide restrictions to curb the spread of COVID-19. Across Europe, companies are cancelling Christmas party plans due to the emergence of the Omicron variant. Daily new cases are exponentially spiking in Norway.