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The World Health Organization hopes
to begin shipping 60 million doses of swine flu vaccine to poor countries in
November as part of an effort to protect their fragile health systems from the
pandemic, according to the Associated Press. WHO wants to provide doctors and
nurses in about 100 countries with vaccines over the coming four to five
months, using a stockpile provided by drug companies and donor countries, said
vaccine chief Marie-Paule Kieny. WHO has warned that poor countries risk being
overwhelmed as health workers fall ill and are unable to care for patients with
other diseases. Some spare doses could also be used to protect vulnerable
groups such as pregnant women and those with lowered immune systems, but
further donations are still required, she said. So far, GlaxoSmithKline PLC and
Sanofi-Aventis SA have pledged 150 million doses to WHO, while about a dozen
developed countries including the United States have said they will set aside
10 percent of their supply for poor nations. That falls far short of covering
everyone who may need vaccine from WHO. The health body says that figure may
reach 3 billion because many governments can''t afford to buy it. About 4,500
people are known to have died from the disease since the outbreak began in
April, according to WHO.
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