COVID-19 vaccination in Ghana

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Date1 March 2021 (2021-03-01) – present
TargetImmunisation of Ghanaians against COVID-19
Participants
COVID-19 vaccination campaign in Ghana
Vaccination card issued after taking the COVID-19 vaccine
Date1 March 2021 (2021-03-01) – present
CauseCOVID-19 pandemic
TargetImmunisation of Ghanaians against COVID-19
Participants
Outcome
  • 4% of the Ghanaian population has received at least one dose
  • 1% of the Ghanaian population has been fully vaccinated

COVID-19 vaccination in Ghana began on 1 March 2021 after the country became the first recipient of the Oxford-AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine as part of the COVAX initiative. As of 6 June 2021, Ghana had administered 1,230,000 vaccine doses.[1]

Vaccines on order

In 2020, president Nana Akufo-Addo signed the UNAIDS Public Letter on People's Vaccine which was a campaign calling for public accessibility to the COVID-19 vaccine. He joined other world leaders to write an open letter in order to encourage the distribution of free vaccines at no cost to all people. This was because of concerns raised that people in richer countries may have quicker access to the vaccine than poor countries.[2] Minister for Foreign Affairs, Shirley Ayorkor Botchway stated on 12 February 2021 that there was an engagement between Ghana, Russia and China to secure COVID-19 vaccines.[3] Accra and Kumasi were said by the government to be the first places to receive the vaccines.[4]

On 24 February 2021, a shipment of 600,000 Oxford–AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine to Accra via COVAX made it the first country in Africa to receive vaccines via the initiative.[5] The vaccination campaign began on 1 March 2021 as president Akufo-Addo received the first jab.[6][7]

Vaccine Approval Deployment
Oxford–AstraZeneca[8] Yes 1 March 2021
Sputnik V Yes[9] Yes
Janssen Yes[10] No

History

US Officials deliver COVID-19 vaccines to Ghana as part of the COVAX program in November 2021

Timeline

March 2021

On 1 March 2021, Ghana began its national vaccination program against COVID-19. By the end of the month more than half a million doses had been administered.[11]

April 2021

Ghana received 350,000 doses of the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine which the Democratic Republic of Congo had been unable to use before the expiry date.[12] By the end of the month 0.8 million doses had been administered.

October 2021

Ghana received more than 1.5 million doses of the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine from Germany and half a million doses of the same vaccine from Denmark, Norway and Iceland. It also received 1.3 million doses of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine from the United States.[13]

By the end of the month three million doses had been administered. 7% of the targeted population had been fully vaccinated.

Deployment

See also

References

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