Go to home page

Fauci and Tedros Caution, Stop Pandemic Everywhere, or It Will Remain a Threat to Everyone

Feb. 6 , 2021 (EIRNS)—In a Feb. 4 interview with NPR, Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the NIH National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, emphasized the urgency of taking a global approach to the eradication of the coronavirus, and of doing so quickly before it has more time to mutate. “You’ve got to be able to get—with the help of the developed world—the entire world vaccinated,” Fauci stated. “As we allow this infection to exist to any degree in any part of the world, it will always be a threat. So we’ve got to approach this the way we approach smallpox, the way we approach polio, and the way we approach measles and other devastating global outbreaks.”

He said that the pandemic is far from over, and that the danger is that the virus will mutate and new strains will emerge, as is already occurring. The key is to vaccinate “as many people as quickly and as efficiently as you possibly can” and “to double down on the public health measures of uniform wearing of masks, physical distancing, avoiding congregate settings—particularly indoors.”

Fauci further stated:

“The more the virus replicates, the more opportunity you give it to mutate. So when you have so much infection in the community, as we have had in the United States over the last few months, where you literally have hundreds of thousands of new infections per day ... that means the virus has almost an open playing field to replicate, [which] means you give it an opportunity to mutate.”

World Health Organization Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus argued the same point, telling reporters in Geneva on Feb. 5:

“Globally, the number of vaccinations has now overtaken the number of reported infections. In one sense, that’s good news, and a remarkable achievement in such a short timeframe. But more than three-quarters of those vaccinations are in just 10 countries that account for almost 60% of global GDP.”

And 130 countries comprising 2.5 billion people have yet to administer a single vaccine shot. “The longer it takes to vaccinate those most at risk everywhere, the more opportunity we give the virus to mutate and evade vaccines,” he said.

Tedros urged there be “a massive scale-up in production” of COVID-19 vaccines worldwide, including pharmaceutical companies providing access to their manufacturing infrastructure, as well as issuing non-exclusive licenses to allow other producers to manufacture their vaccine. “This sharing of knowledge and data could enable immediate use of untapped production capacity and help build additional manufacturing bases, especially in Africa, Asia, and Latin America,” he said.

This is “the best way to protect the rest of their own population,” he argued.

Back to top    Go to home page clear

clear
clear