GLOBAL VACCINATION: HOW THE EVOLVING HEALTHCARE INFRASTRUCTURE IS SUPPORTING THE FIGHT AGAINST PANDEMIC

 COVID-19 (coronavirus) vaccines have started becoming accessible in most countries and are probably a severe product in fighting the pandemic in 2021. Several vaccines are already in the development trails or phase three trials that have reported promising data in the initial phase, with some receiving authorization for use.

Now the focus is expected to shift to how quickly and successfully vaccines can be supplied and distributed, an effort that will be the largest simultaneous global public-health initiative ever undertaken. The challenge's scale is enormous: from the sheer volume of doses wanted to plan for uncertainties around the vaccines' efficacy, safety, and durability — and from logistical and storage challenges to the service-delivery model. Governments from around the globe are likely to mount communication and education campaigns to meet the consumer's concerns about vaccine safety. Especially, underserved populations excessively affected by COVID-19, including ethnic, minority, and socioeconomically deprived groups and rural populations, may face vaccine adoption disparities if the companies or government execute without proactive planning.

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COVID-19 Vaccine Delivery Challenge Worldwide

The scientific community's non-countable outstanding progress has brought the vaccine closer to consumer's doorstep at the earliest. The stick now passes from the scientific community to a new collaborative effort, led by government & policymakers, the private sector, healthcare professionals, and other community groups. The COVID-19 vaccine rollout will be different from any other prior vaccine delivery effort. Governments and associated partners will be expected to rapidly accelerate their efforts to ensure they can meet community expectations of efficient vaccine delivery at no extra time or cost.

Multiple factors are carried out to make the COVID-19 vaccine rollout.

Accelerated Pace and Giant Scale of Delivery

Nations face a four-by-four challenge: a vaccine arriving at four times the pace and requiring delivery four times the scale.

Four times the pace – The coronavirus vaccine has been developed four times faster than the mumps vaccine, the previous record for a vaccine developed for use in the broader public setting. The consequence of this rapid pace of clinical development is that governments and policymakers have had far less time than previously to prepare for a robust vaccination program.

Four times the scale – The COVID-19 vaccine rollout is expected to be four times larger than any previous effort because the aspiration is for broad adoption at significantly higher rates than typically achieved with seasonal adult vaccines, such as the flu. Compared with the flu, roughly half the adult population across the OECD is protected each year with a single dose. The COVID-19 condition may require vaccinating over half the adult population with two doses. Globally, it makes the vaccine need for billions of people.

Considering digital infrastructure to help through the COVID-19 pandemic

  • Various Nation's digital infrastructure requires strengthening to deal with the COVID-19 impact and future public health crises
  • Proper Artificial Intelligence (AI) integration into the public health response should be an urgency
  • Big data analysis involving disease transmission patterns, citizens' movement, and health monitoring to aid prevention measures

Considering the past, the world has witnessed the rise of SARS, Ebola, Zika virus, and now COVID-19. This virus is a rising threat to the communities.

Cities around the world have set priorities related to infrastructure innovation to safeguard their physical systems so they can stay antifragile and robust during natural disasters such as tsunami, earthquakes, and hurricanes. But pandemics have exposed that these approaches aren't enough to ensure connectivity and access to society during biological disasters.

At the time of this crisis, the primary challenge is to integrate and update digital infrastructure at various public health response stages, particularly in epidemic forecasting and decision making. In the 17 years later SARS, a new digital age era has arisen; AI and the Internet of Things (IoT) could be instrumental in keeping this new virus within measurable limits.

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Pressure on Digital Infrastructure

Governments are now dependent on ubiquitous instruments (sensors) and authoritative algorithms instead of flesh-and-blood spooks. To track the COVID-19 impact, several governments have hugely implemented systems based on these new surveillance tools.

The world map also shows the decrease in people's transportation has drastically reduced carbon emissions across different geographies, but what are the digital technologies emissions? Will the large volume of people working from home (WFH) using digital systems in quarantine can cause or increase emissions from other fonts? What is being done by the large cloud-service providers to address the capacity issue?

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