Audio By Carbonatix
President Akufo-Addo has said the country would reach its 20 million vaccination target by the end of the first quarter of 2022.
Speaking in an interview with Forbes Africa, he expressed optimism about the country’s plan to vaccinate the entire adult population in Ghana.
“Access to vaccines has been growing. By the end of this year, projections are that we would have received some 15 million vaccines.
"That 20 million target we may not reach this year, but we believe by the end of the first quarter next year, we would have attained.
And the significance of it is that in a population of 30 million people, if we are able to vaccinate 20 million, it means we are vaccinating the entire adult population of Ghana and that in itself gives us all the immunity we need so as a target, it is a really important target. We are also taking some long-term decisions,” Akufo-Addo said in an interview with Forbes Africa.
He added, “We are in the process of creating a national vaccine institute led by very capable and world-class Ghanaian scientists, and we are hoping that by next year it will be up and running so we can find strong capabilities to find vaccines for our people.”
Currently, 2,573,073 persons representing 12.9%, have fully been vaccinated since the mass vaccination programme started in March this year.
The country is also expecting to receive an additional 8 million doses by the end of the year and an estimated 26 million doses by the end of December.
The Ghana Health Service has confirmed 1,074 new cases of the virus as of December 29, 2021, increasing the total number of confirmed cases to 141,295.
The death toll stands at 1,287 after four additional fatalities were recorded across the country, according to the update on the dashboard of the Ghana Health Service.
Meanwhile, health experts have said the country is experiencing its fourth wave of the pandemic since it broke out in the country in March 2020.
“Clearly, you can see that there is a torrential rise in cases, so if in terms of nomenclature, then we are in it. I mean, if you look at the shape of the curve, we are now a different shape than we had two or three weeks ago,” Director of Public Health at the Ghana Health Service, Dr Franklin Asiedu Bekoe, told JoyNews.
Latest Stories
-
Trial of man accused of stabbing firefighter set for December 17
11 minutes -
Prof Antwi-Danso cautions ECOWAS against rushed troop deployment to Benin
16 minutes -
Africans must reclaim their dignity and history – Dr Ibn Chambas urges
23 minutes -
Local production key to food security – Fisheries Minister
29 minutes -
Mahama commends US for lifting tariffs on Ghana’s agricultural exports
35 minutes -
Only punishing the public – FABAG rejects ‘insensitive’ tariff hikes amid soaring inefficiency
42 minutes -
Kumasi schools face dangerous air pollution – Researcher warns
47 minutes -
Veep hails private medical schools’ role in strengthening Ghana’s healthcare
54 minutes -
Reset the system, not tariffs – FABAG demands full audit before any increases
1 hour -
Former Liverpool co-owner Hicks dies aged 79
1 hour -
Hojlund scores twice as Napoli beat Juventus to go top
1 hour -
Spurs investigate Yves Bissouma nitrous oxide claim
2 hours -
Pressure increases on Alonso as Celta Vigo beat 9-man Real Madrid
2 hours -
Canadian airline to start cancelling flights ahead of planned strike
2 hours -
Death of Venezuelan opposition figure in custody ‘vile’, US says
2 hours
