<p>Half of the people in poorer countries have now received two vaccine doses against Covid-19, a global vaccine alliance said on Thursday, hailing progress in closing the vaccine equity gap.</p>.<p>Gavi, which co-leads the Covax global vaccine distribution scheme with the World Health Organisation and others, said the 92 lower-income countries receiving donor-funded jabs had reached 50 per cent coverage on average.</p>.<p>Gavi, the WHO and others have long condemned the stark inequities in access to vaccines developed to battle the still raging Covid pandemic.</p>.<p>"Vaccine inequity is the biggest moral failure of our times and people and countries are paying the price," UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said earlier this year.</p>.<p>While those inequities remain, Gavi said massive efforts to narrow the gap were paying off.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/national/india-produces-and-supplies-nearly-60-of-vaccines-used-worldwide-fm-sitharaman-1136929.html" target="_blank">India produces and supplies nearly 60% of vaccines used worldwide: FM Sitharaman</a></strong></p>.<p>"Lower-income countries have made remarkable strides," it said in a statement celebrating the "key Covid-19 coverage milestone".</p>.<p>Gavi highlighted the dramatic improvement since the start of the year, when on average only 31 per cent of people across the 92 countries had received the two initial jabs.</p>.<p>Back then, vaccine coverage in 34 of those nations stood at below 10 percent, compared to 10 countries today, it said.</p>.<p>Gavi said governments had successfully prioritised the vaccination of healthcare workers, with most of the lower-income countries now protecting more than 80 per cent of this highest-risk group.</p>.<p>Derrick Sim, acting managing director of Gavi's Covax office, hailed the "vital progress".</p>.<p>"The pandemic is not over," he said in Gavi's statement, pointing out that "cases and deaths continue to rise and new variants pose a threat to us all."</p>.<p>Since the first Covid-19 vaccines became available, Covax has shipped more than 1.4 billion doses to lower-income countries around the world.</p>
<p>Half of the people in poorer countries have now received two vaccine doses against Covid-19, a global vaccine alliance said on Thursday, hailing progress in closing the vaccine equity gap.</p>.<p>Gavi, which co-leads the Covax global vaccine distribution scheme with the World Health Organisation and others, said the 92 lower-income countries receiving donor-funded jabs had reached 50 per cent coverage on average.</p>.<p>Gavi, the WHO and others have long condemned the stark inequities in access to vaccines developed to battle the still raging Covid pandemic.</p>.<p>"Vaccine inequity is the biggest moral failure of our times and people and countries are paying the price," UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said earlier this year.</p>.<p>While those inequities remain, Gavi said massive efforts to narrow the gap were paying off.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/national/india-produces-and-supplies-nearly-60-of-vaccines-used-worldwide-fm-sitharaman-1136929.html" target="_blank">India produces and supplies nearly 60% of vaccines used worldwide: FM Sitharaman</a></strong></p>.<p>"Lower-income countries have made remarkable strides," it said in a statement celebrating the "key Covid-19 coverage milestone".</p>.<p>Gavi highlighted the dramatic improvement since the start of the year, when on average only 31 per cent of people across the 92 countries had received the two initial jabs.</p>.<p>Back then, vaccine coverage in 34 of those nations stood at below 10 percent, compared to 10 countries today, it said.</p>.<p>Gavi said governments had successfully prioritised the vaccination of healthcare workers, with most of the lower-income countries now protecting more than 80 per cent of this highest-risk group.</p>.<p>Derrick Sim, acting managing director of Gavi's Covax office, hailed the "vital progress".</p>.<p>"The pandemic is not over," he said in Gavi's statement, pointing out that "cases and deaths continue to rise and new variants pose a threat to us all."</p>.<p>Since the first Covid-19 vaccines became available, Covax has shipped more than 1.4 billion doses to lower-income countries around the world.</p>