Nigeria receives 2.6 million COVID-19 vaccines from Canada

Nigeria has received 2,649,600 doses of the Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 vaccination from the Canadian government.

This was announced by the National Primary Health Care Development Agency on Friday in a post on its official Facebook page.

The Canadian High Commissioner to Nigeria, Ambassador Jamie Christoff, officially presented the donation to that country.

Dr. Faisal Shuaib, the executive director of the NPHCDA, stated in his speech that the donation was essential to aiding Nigeria in accelerating the vaccination rollout process.

Dr. Shuaib said “Johnson & Johnson offers a single-dose opportunity for full vaccination, which means if you take one dose of the vaccine, you are regarded as a fully vaccinated person. However, we strongly recommend a booster dose after two months of taking the initial dose to strengthen your level of immunity against COVID-19. A second dose of J&J vaccine serves as the booster dose.

“May I use this opportunity to thank everyone for your support on the launch of our SCALES 3.0 vaccine deployment strategy. As we all know, we are in a full campaign mode in which COVID-19 vaccines are not only readily made available in the health facilities and other designated places, but also brought by our vaccination teams to your doorsteps! We are leveraging on our polio eradication experience to fight COVID-19, and we are pretty sure that with the kind of support we have received from the Canadian government today, and the continued cooperation of our partners and stakeholders, we will, sooner than expected, be able to put COVID-19 behind us in Nigeria.

“Our SCALES 3.0 also offers an opportunity for childhood vaccination and other PHC services for clients alongside the COVID-19 vaccination. What this simply means is that parents can take their eligible children for vaccination against polio, yellow fever, measles and other vaccine-preventable childhood diseases in the same locations where the adults receive COVID-19 vaccines. Our mobile teams are also in possession of all these vaccines when they visit your homes. Please welcome them and present yourselves and your eligible children for vaccination as may be applicable.

“The recent MIC/NIC survey results show that despite the pandemic, Nigeria is only one of the few countries globally that recorded improved immunization coverage. I would like to thank parents and guidance who continued to take their children for vaccination even with the difficulties and challenges faced during the lockdown and limited access to health facilities.”

As of August 18, 28,659,698 people had received all three doses of the vaccine, according to the NPHCDA director, with 40,700,979 of the eligible population having already received the first one.

Additionally, he stated that 2,666,830 of the completely immunized individuals had received their booster shots.

“We enjoin the states to step up actions to flag off the SCALES 3.0 strategy and follow with intensive actions to ensure that every eligible adult and child are vaccinated. The federal government has designed a performance-based incentive to improve the uptake of COVID-19 vaccines and other PHC services in the states and the communities. It is our hope that Nigeria and the rest of the world will overcome the COVID-19 pandemic and recover rapidly from its social and economic adversities,” he noted.