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UN agency stockpiling syringes, mapping cold-chain storage capacity

As soon as vaccines are licensed for use, the world will need as many syringes as doses of vaccine, said the UN agency on Monday [October 19]. It wants to be ready.

UNICEF’s advance stockpiling initiative is being done in collaboration with Gavi, the vaccine alliance, and it is part of a larger plan to accumulate one billion syringes by 2021 to guarantee supply and help ensure that syringes arrive in countries before the Covid-19 vaccines.

Henrietta Fore, the executive director of UNICEF, said the vaccination effort would be “one of the largest mass undertakings in human history”​ and that the UN agency was looking to ensure the means to administer the vaccines would be available, where needed.

“In order to move fast later, we must move fast now. We will already have over half a billion syringes pre-positioned where they can be deployed quickly and cost effectively,”​ she said.

Unlike vaccines, which are heat sensitive and thus usually shipped by air, syringes have a shelf life of five years and are typically distributed via sea freight, explained the UN agency.

UNICEF said it was also purchasing five million safety boxes for disposal of used syringes.

Cold-chain infrastructure

To make sure that vaccines are transported and stored at the right temperature, UNICEF, along with the World Health Organization (WHO), is also mapping out existing cold chain equipment and storage capacity – in the private as well as public sector – and preparing necessary guidance for countries to receive vaccines.

“We are doing everything we can to deliver these essential supplies efficiently, effectively and at the right temperature,” ​Fore said.

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