After various stretches of lockdowns and the
related dire political, social, and economic consequences, the world has welcomed the news that several companies – including Moderna,
AstraZeneca and Pfizer
– are approaching an effective vaccine for Covid-19.
Approximately 200 more are in the pipeline, of which 48
in clinical and 164 in pre-clinical stages of
development. While there is thus hope on the horizon, for low and lower-middle
income countries the roll-out of the vaccine will be enormously expensive, whatever
option is eventually selected. As such, the life-saving vaccine may bring ramifications
for future prioritization within domestic health budgets as well as allocations
in foreign aid budgets.
In terms of ethics
considerations, much of the debate so far has either focused on (1) criticizing
high-income countries scrambling to secure vaccines
for their citizens for lacking in solidarity and for inadequate support of equitable
distribution schemes
(COVAX) – or (2) on prioritization of population groups (see here, here and here). Contributing to the emergent analysis of the ethics of
Covid-19 vaccination schemes while things are still ‘up in the air’ – the coordinated
‘mammoth operation’ led by
UNICEF is in the midst of a vaccine tender process
(running 6 weeks from November 12) – in this
commentary, we suggest that attention must also be paid to the complex ethics
challenges arising from the logistical challenges of distributing specific
vaccines.
Taking
the Pfizer vaccine, with a storage requirement of -70˚C (-94 F) or
below, as our case example, we identify a preliminary list of challenges
relating to the feasibility and societal impact of a successful roll-out of an
ultra-cold chain dependent vaccine. The cost and the probability of logistics
failure is extremely high – and even if a program can be successfully
implemented, serious ethical issues with chilling effects on global health
outcomes will likely arise. We also suggest that laying
out some of the issues related to the Pfizer vaccine, if it were to be rolled
out globally, can shed some light on medium and long-term ethics challenges for
other vaccines as well, even if some probably present fewer challenges in this
regard.
Feasibility
With respect to feasibility,
ultra-cold chains require special cooling systems in facilities and during
transportation. The tradeoffs involved in successful implementation must be
carefully considered. Technical challenges greatly increasing risk include time
constraints, freezing units, package sizes, and kitting:
- The
vaccine puts significant constraints on time: The proposed active plus passive
cooling in containers will enable keeping vaccines in the required temperature
range for 72 hours, after which the combination of power cells (active cooling)
and dry ice (passive cooling) deteriorates. Such a short delivery time calls
for air transportation; yet carrying dry ice on airplanes, especially passenger
planes, is regulated as it consumes oxygen. The same solution has been used for
ultra-cold chains before (e.g., STRIVE Ebola vaccine), but
the scale of any Covid-19 vaccination programme will be constrained by the global
availability of such containers, and the regulations constraining their use.
- The unaffordability
of freezing units is a possible spoiler: The estimated time that vaccines will
stay usable after opening a package is 24 hours only. At facilities, including
storage, customs, cross-docking, materials handling, and vaccination centers,
freezing units will be required to store and appropriately handle the vaccines.
In a bidding war, rural,
small, and underfunded hospitals will lose out.
- Proposed
package sizes are for 5,000 vs 1,000 units. While optimal for transportation, these
sizes do not consider usage patterns: the administration of 1,000 vaccines
within 24 hours requires huge distribution facilities and massive manpower. Throwing
away unused vaccines comes at an exuberant cost. Locations with lower
population density may not be able to use such package sizes and de facto be
excluded from the distribution of vaccines.
- Vaccination
programs have a host of material needs: syringes, gloves, PPE, tents for
locations etc. Kitting will
be of the essence; yet the other parts of these health kits will differ in
their temperature control requirements. Inter-agency
health kits have in the past been developed for
vaccination programmes as well as emergencies, and include from cholera kits to
entire field hospitals as a kit. They are composed in a way that regardless of
the administering unit, any humanitarian organisation or health centre would
know what to find in which box, and which items would need special processes
(such as temperature control) in handling and storage. In the case of COVAX,
UNICEF has started to procure and stock up on e.g. syringes and gloves, as to
say, items that will for sure be needed to be able to administer vaccines.
Societal
impact
In
terms of societal impact, the following chilling effects of getting an
effective vaccine program rolled out urgently need ethical consideration:
- The Covid-19 response focuses on an
increasingly narrow range of options for combatting the pandemic. We are now at
a point where the solution – in the form of a vaccine (any of the vaccines) – is
steering problem framing. However, even if cold chains can successfully be kept
intact in hard-to-reach areas, and the vaccine can be distributed successfully,
a vaccine program does not solve the structural problems in public health
infrastructure that are greatly exacerbated by the pandemic. Food shortages, lack
of access to clean water and basic hygiene, domestic violence and drop-outs
will not be magically cured through a vaccine.
- While the Covax Advanced Market
Commitment (AMC) scheme will likely be a useful vehicle to secure health
outcomes, it should be noted that GAVI explicitly mentions co-payments: “it is
likely that the 92 ODA-eligible countries accessing vaccines through the AMC
may also be required to share some of the costs of COVID-19 vaccines and
delivery, up to US$ 1.60 – US$ 2 per dose – a mirror of the amount paid upfront
by self-financing participants.” Taken together, the knock-on effects of the cost of
vaccines and ultra-cold chains constrain future decisions about health budget
allocations. Already overwhelmed health budgets in poorer regions will be
additionally burdened by high-income countries demanding that vaccine coverage
is prioritized to combat Covid-19 once and for all. In other words, the countries
with the youngest populations and the highest child mortality will be asked to
invest their health budgets to rescue the aging West.
- Whichever vaccine or set of vaccines
are procured for distribution through global mechanisms, this decision will likely
determine pathways for foreign aid. For example, once effective ultra-cold chains
have been financed and established, there is a likelihood that allocations for
vaccines will tie up a significant portion of donor budgets for the
short-to-medium time. We argue that the funding of vaccine initiatives –in
particular the financing of the ACT-Accelerator through ODA budgets– needs to be
subjected to careful ethics impact assessments.
In conclusion,
while a vaccine requiring an ultra-cold chain may be the most daunting one
logistically, all options come with their own requirements on temperature
ranges, but also with differences in vaccine efficacy, and regimes to
administer. Technically, if we can manage the Pfizer one, the other ones should
follow. Regardless, the ethics of every single vaccine candidate, including its
likely logistics pathways and distributive impact on public health, needs to be
carefully mapped out.
We declare no competing interests.
About Kristin Bergtora Sandvik
Kristin Bergtora Sandvik (S.J.D Harvard Law School 2008) is a professor of legal sociology at the Faculty of Law, University of Oslo and a Research Professor in Humanitarian Studies at PRIO. bergtora@prio.orgAbout Gyöngyi Kovács
Gyöngyi Kovács is the Erkko Professor in Humanitarian Logistics, which is the first professorship in humanitarian logistics worldwide, and is the Subject Head of Supply Chain Management and Social Responsibility at the Hanken School of Economics, in Helsinki, Finland. She is a founding Editor-in-Chief of the Journal of Humanitarian Logistics and Supply Chain Management (JHLSCM) and is on the editorial board of several other journals. She was the first Director of the Humanitarian Logistics and Supply Chain Research Institute (HUMLOG Institute) and has published extensively in the areas of humanitarian logistics and sustainable supply chain management. Currently, she is leading a Horizon 2020 (EU) COVID-19 project called “HERoS” (Health Emergency Response in Interconnected Systems).About Tina Comes
Dr. Tina Comes is Delft Technology Fellow and Associate Professor in the Department of Engineering Systems and Services at the TU Delft, Netherlands, and Professor in the Department of ICT, University of Agder, Norway. Dr. Comes is a Visiting Professor at the Université Dauphine, France, and a member of the Norwegian Academy for Technological Sciences. She serves as Scientific Director of the 4TU Centre for Resilience Engineering and is Principle Investigator for the Advanced Metropolitan Solutions Institute, a collaboration between TU Delft, Wageningen University and MIT.