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As America’s Vaccination Rate Continues to Decline, Millions of Unused COVID-19 Doses Set to go Waste
Some politicians and public health experts have raised concerns over the ethical implications of so many vaccine shots going to waste.

Los Angeles: Amid an increase in new COVID infections, millions of unused COVID-19 doses in the United States are set to go waste as the country’s vaccination rates continued to decline.
Federal data show that US states received a staggering 720 million COVID-19 doses and more than 570 million of those shots have been administered since the emergency use authorisation of the first Covid-19 vaccines in the country last winter, according to a report by ABC News.
However, state-provided data found that millions of those vaccine shots have not ended up in arms, largely due to a significant decline in the number of individuals willing to get vaccinated, Xinhua news agency reported.
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Many vaccine doses are now left unused in refrigerators or discarded in trash cans across the country.
According to the ABC News report, Millions of Covid-19 vaccine doses have either gone to waste, remain unused, or will expire in the coming weeks and months citing officials from health departments in states and state-provided data.
“It is a tremendous loss of opportunity for these vaccines to not make it into the shoulders of those who need them,” said C Buddy Creech, Director of the Vanderbilt Vaccine Research Program and professor at the Department of Pediatrics at Vanderbilt University.
“Not only is it a financial loss for the purchaser of vaccines — the US government — but also a significant health loss for those who are not yet protected from Covid and its complications,” he added.
Nearly 66.1 per cent of the US population is fully vaccinated against Covid as of Monday, according to the latest data from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
Covid-19 boosters have been authorised in the US for adults since November. However, CDC data show less than 50 per cent of eligible Americans have received their first booster.
Vaccination rates continued to drop in the country amid a declining demand for vaccines and hesitancy, leading to the waste of unused millions of doses currently in state stockpiles and at risk of expiring.
As of April 20, the seven-day average number of administered vaccine doses per day was 470,903, a 13.2 per cent decrease from the previous week, according to the latest CDC data.
The country is witnessing an increase of new Covid-19 infections recently again, with an average of about 44,000 new cases and 310 new deaths each day, CDC data show.
“The pool of people that are unvaccinated is likely to remain unconvinced of the importance of vaccine-induced protection,” said John Brownstein, an epidemiologist at Boston Children’s Hospital and an ABC News contributor, adding that convincing those still hesitant to get the vaccine shot will be a difficult feat.
Some politicians and public health experts have raised concerns over the ethical implications of so many vaccine shots going to waste.
“The wastage of millions of doses is a stark reminder of the privilege we have had in accessing vaccines while the majority of the world had to wait months. Extraordinary resources and financial investment will ultimately go to waste,” Brownstein added.
(With agency inputs)
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