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What it takes to get vaccines from the lab to the field | Susan Silberman | Big Think

What it takes to get vaccines from the lab to the field
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The United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) are a set of 17 directives to be completed by a 2030 deadline, with the aim of significantly improving quality of life for all people on Earth. Pfizer has made a commitment to SDG #3: Good health and well-being for all. Africa bears 25% of the world’s disease burden yet has just 3% of the world’s health workers. So how do you get life-saving vaccines to world’s most vulnerable? Pfizer partners with several organizations to help strengthen the ability to deliver vaccines in developing countries. By training local healthcare workers we can remove some of the obstacles in getting a child vaccinated. Recent innovations in Pfizer’s vaccine technology, like the multi-dose vial, have reduced shipping and storage space, which is critical as vaccines need to be transported and stored at very specific temperatures.
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SUSAN SILBERMANN:

Susan Silbermann is President and General Manager of Pfizer Vaccines. Pfizer is proud to collaborate with Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance, on a shared goal ̶ “to protect the world’s most vulnerable children through a sustainable vaccine program.”
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TRANSCRIPT:

SUSAN SILBERMANN: Community health workers play an important role for the health of women and their families. Often they’re the connection to the health care system and they educate women about the importance of interventions like vaccines and family planning. They also provide important health care through models like integrated community case management that address nutrition, malaria, diarrhea, and pneumonia.

Now let me tell you a story about a healthcare worker in Ghana that we recently met. She works in a clinic in a small village in the Ho region of Ghana, which is approximately three hours north of the capital. In her clinic there is no electricity, there’s no running water. Now these two elements are critical to ensure safe and effective use of medicines.

For example, vaccines need to be stored at a specific temperature to maintain their effectiveness, and therefore they are stored in fridges, which are powered by electricity. Instead of storing the vaccines in her clinic, the healthcare worker travels one hour each way on the bus to get fresh vaccines and transport them for the day in a cooler. She then works all day at the clinic administering these vaccines and seeing mothers, children, and babies. Without the dedication of health care workers like this one in Ghana, it’s very likely that communities of children would not have the opportunity to be vaccinated.

As a global company, you’d expect that we’d have a great passion for innovating to discover new vaccines, and we do that. What you might not expect is that we’re also truly passionate about innovating on our existing vaccines, both in the vaccine vial and in the packaging they arrive in. We do this based on learnings about the constraints that face the people we are trying so very hard to reach. So what does innovation look like? Well, I brought a vial to show you. This tiny vial is an incredible testament to scientific innovation. Until 2017, it provided one dose to vaccinate one child. But now, this vial provides four doses so we can vaccinate four children. By combining multiple doses into one vial we’ve reduced the storage space and the shipping requirements. Innovations like this will help make it easier to get vaccines to children everywhere.

Here is a startling fact: Sub-Saharan Africa bears nearly 25 percent of the disease burden in the whole world, and yet they only have three percent of global health care workers. So one of the things we feel is really critical is ensuring that health care workers are trained to administer vaccines. For example, 2017 was the first year that Pfizer’s new multi-dose vial became available in Gavi countries. In order to ensure the health care workers were appropriate trained we partnered with AMP and the World Health Organization to develop a pneumococcal conjugate refresher course along with the training program on our multi-dose vial.

In partnership with WHO and our implementing partner AMP, we developed a “train the trainer” model for our new multi-dose vial. The train the trainer model allows country ownership by starting with a small group of health care workers who then become master trainers. Then, in turn, they train the next level of health care workers until the training reaches th…

For the full transcript, check out https://bigthink.com/sponsored/pfizer-united-nations-vaccine-innovation

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