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Why this great hurry to vaccinate?

19 Jul 2021

  • A golden opportunity for the vaccine industry to expand and profit
By Prof. Tissa Vitarana Sri Lanka has over 50% living below the poverty line, and the malnutrition rate is estimated to be 18%. It is obvious that the first priority should be given to provide relief for hunger and then to fighting the Covid-19 pandemic, a healthcare problem. It is after relieving those suffering from malnutrition that money should be devoted to infrastructure, like highways. But in Sri Lanka it appears to be the other way round. Healthcare is a priority, but even there, are we acting sensibly? The Health Promotion Bureau Director is quoted as saying that the number of Covid-19 cases has dropped to 6.2%, on the basis of random PCR tests, from an earlier figure of 10%. The Epidemiology Unit has carried out about 7,000 random PCR tests daily, covering all medical officer of health (MOH) divisions in the country. The best public health measure is the observance of the three health rules – wearing masks, observing social distancing, and washing the hands with soap and water after touching anything touched by others. This has been going on from the outset and is successful at little or no cost. As nearly 80% of Covid-19 infections are asymptomatic or extremely mild, they develop immunity and do not need any vaccination. Vaccination is only indicated to the vulnerable group – the elderly (over 60 years), and those with serious underlying diseases, e.g. respiratory, cardiac, diabetes mellitus, cancers, etc. This group of about 20% of the population should be vaccinated, commencing with the oldest age group, as they are prone to develop symptoms and some of them can die. The occasional occurrence of a case in a child fits into the pattern associated with several virus diseases called the Kawasaki syndrome. As such, there is no need to immunise children, taken as a group. An intensive programme is now underway to vaccinate all those above 30 years in every district. A total of 36% of this target population has received the first dose already and 21% have received both the doses. A large mass of expensive vaccines from different countries are being rushed into the country as if we are faced with a life or death struggle. By the end of June, Sri Lanka had only 277,519 cases with 3,574 deaths (1.4%). A social scientist visited a cemetery a few days ago and inquired as to whether there had been an increase in deaths since the Covid-19 outbreak began and she was able to confirm that no such spike had occurred. Why then is this great hurry to vaccinate? Even in the US, no doctors and other healthcare workers have died of Covid-19. The vaccine industry, which is in decline, has seen a golden opportunity to expand and profit. An intensive campaign was carried out in the US to frighten the people and to compel them to take the vaccine, which had already been mass produced. It also provided a good opportunity to test new varieties of vaccines, e.g. the messenger ribonucleic acid (mRNA) vaccines (like the Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna Covid-19 vaccines from the US), which are really the introduction of genetic material to get our body cells to produce only the spike protein of the virus, not the whole virus. As we all know, the introduction of foreign genetic material is considered to be unsafe and future outcomes are uncertain. That is why the European Union refused to import genetically modified (GM) foods from South America. There were campaigns in the US questioning the safety and efficacy of the Covid-19 vaccines. Sales in the US and the West have not been great, as questions have been raised by scientists. In North America and Europe, it was because of the big spike in cases, especially approaching winter, that the Covid-19 phobia gained ground, and “emergency use” was resorted to. There is no such emergency situation in Sri Lanka. Further, Asian and African countries that have used Bacillus Calmette-Guérin (BCG) as a protection against tuberculosis (TB) have been shown to have benefitted from it and have less cases of Covid-19. The vaccine is also expensive and many people in the US refused to buy it, especially the poor Blacks and Browns. The vaccine industry had to find a market for this massive unsold surplus. What better way than to look abroad for markets among those who are already mentally conditioned to accept the vaccine as a necessity? It is not difficult to buy over officials and decision makers and get the local private sector to come in with suitable inducements. This is what we are seeing in many countries worldwide, and here in Sri Lanka too. Governments tend to fall in line in the face of such intensive campaigning. Covid-19 phobia is there among the people to be exploited and the environment and the partners are also in place, so why not exploit it? The vaccine producers themselves admit that the optimal time for boosters is still being worked out to get full protection. The side effects are also being looked for and are not fully known. This particularly applies to the long-term effects. The protection will be short term and in all probability, annual boosters will be required. This is going to be a considerable cost. On the political side, the lockdown policy practised in Sri Lanka has no real benefit from a medical point of view, and is only increasing poverty and disrupting the economy, leading to job losses. We need a more informed debate on this whole issue and then come out with what really needs to be done. Protests against vaccination should be allowed, as much as for vaccination. (The writer is a virologist, Government Parliamentarian, the Committee on Public Accounts Chairman, and the Lanka Sama Samaja Party Leader)  


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