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by devdas 1882 days ago
Shipping vaccines and materials needed for vaccine manufacture would be a good start.

Reversing this would be good too. https://www.democracynow.org/2021/3/11/rich_countries_block_...

2 comments

And here's a good article explaining why waiving vaccine intellectual property rights is a misguided area of focus: https://www.washingtonpost.com/outlook/2021/03/15/vaccine-co...
Only if you take a constrained view of what constitutes "property rights."

The emergence of an even worse variant is potentially catastrophic, at least economically - our government can compel Pfizer or Moderna to release the details of the vaccine production process to producers in developing nations or publicly.

Agree. It's disappointing that embargoes on exporting vaccine materials to a country, who under normal circumstances produces so much vaccine for the world, are a matter of emergency use policy.
There are 1.3B people in India. There is no way a vaccine is going to arrive in time or be injectable at a scale that matters. If that was a solution, I'd be all for it, but it is not.
The population pyramid there skews heavily young, so it won’t take nearly as many vaccines to protect the most vulnerable.
You’re missing the issue. Once hospital access is unavailable, the death rate spikes.

Young people are absolutely at risk. I can probably name a dozen <45 who required hospitalization, most briefly. Most of those folks had some impact for weeks or months.

The India variant, B.1.617, is a double mutation that seems to effect younger populations. The new explosion in cases is purported to be related to this variant and is said to be more transmissible than the South African variant.
Making sure that at least the health care people are taken care of would be a good start.
They do have vaccines that they are manufacturing in country.
Are they sufficient to have vaccinated all their health care people?