COVID-19 cases slow in Americas, but vaccine impact on virus to take months: PAHO

Reuters

Published Feb 24, 2021 05:31PM ET

Updated Feb 24, 2021 06:05PM ET

By Anthony Boadle

BRASILIA (Reuters) - COVID-19 cases and deaths in the United States fell by 30% in the last week and were declining in most South American nations, but vaccines will take months to have an impact on the virus, the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO) said on Wednesday.

PAHO Director Carissa Etienne urged governments and manufacturers to speed up delivery of vaccines to the region where one million people became sick and 34,000 died in the past seven days.

As of this week, 78 million people have been vaccinated in the Americas, the vast majority of them in North America, and only 13 million in Latin American and the Caribbean, she said.

"This is not enough, and it is not acceptable," Etienne said in a virtual briefing from Washington.

One glimmer of hope is offered by the U.N. and GAVI-led COVAX facility to provide equitable access to vaccines, she said, with hundreds of thousands of doses to be delivered in the next few weeks to countries signed up for the initiative.