AstraZeneca vaccine: Did nationalism spoil UK's 'gift to the world'?

  • Published
Related Topics
AZ vaccine administered in AmazonImage source, IsadoraBrant/HealthinHarmony

The Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine was a British success story - a home-grown vaccine developed and rolled out in less than 12 months. The ambition was huge: to create a vaccine for the world. But did politics and nationalism get in the way?

In the UK, nearly half the adult population has received two doses of AstraZeneca's Covid-19 vaccine. It seems highly likely to have saved more lives here to date than the Pfizer and Moderna jabs combined. Yet it is now barely used by the National Health Service. More than 37 million people have received a booster dose in the UK. Just 48,000 of those were AstraZeneca.

The vaccine has also been sidelined in the EU and was never approved in the United States.

So how did we end up here? I've been talking to scientists, politicians and commentators about the fate of the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine, billed by ministers as "Britain's gift to the world", for a documentary on BBC Two.

I've been asking one central question: did politics and national interests get in the way of ambitions for the vaccine?

Sir John Bell, Regius professor at Oxford University and a man at the heart of the team that got the Oxford vaccine out of the lab and into the arms of millions, is highly critical about decision-makers in the EU.

"They have damaged the reputation of the vaccine in a way that echoes around the rest of the world," he told us. "I think bad behaviour from scientists and from politicians has probably killed hundreds of thousands of people - and that they cannot be proud of."

Image caption,
"Bad behaviour by politicians has probably killed hundreds of thousands of people" - Prof Sir John Bell

Let's go back to early 2021. The Alpha variant was driving up Covid hospital admissions and deaths, putting huge pressure on the UK's health service.

Yet it was also a time of hope. The UK had begun to roll out the highly effective Pfizer and AstraZeneca vaccines - which it had approved here before anywhere else in the world.

The Oxford-AstraZeneca jab was celebrated as a home-grown success story - reflecting the strength of UK biosciences and academia. The government had even looked at the possibility of putting the union flag on the side of the vaccine.

But the scientists at Oxford were uncomfortable with any hint of trumpeting Britishness - by its very nature, a pandemic does not respect borders. The scientists' aim was to tackle the spread of the virus around the world, and prevent new mutations from cropping up in unprotected countries.

"There was too much nationalism," says Prof Adrian Hill, director of the Jenner Institute in Oxford, where the vaccine was developed. "It was encouraging competition between vaccine types, between countries. That's the last thing you want in trying to control the pandemic and provide vaccines for the world."

The vaccine's approval in the UK coincided with Britain's formal separation from the EU.

"I don't think it made relations with Europe any easier that it was promoted as the British vaccine," says Sir John Bell.

In the UK, despite the terrible toll of Covid, there was a buoyant atmosphere in every vaccine centre I attended.

By contrast, the mood on mainland Europe was sombre.

"What we couldn't understand is that while we were deprived of vaccines, we heard that the UK was vaccinating non-stop," says Dr Veronique Trillet-Lenoir, of the European Parliament's Vaccine Contact Group.

By late January, the EU, whose vaccine rollout was lagging behind the UK, finally looked set to approve AstraZeneca.

But before European regulators made their decision, Germany decided it should not be given to those over 65. While in France, President Macron, called the vaccine "quasi-ineffective" in the elderly.

But just hours later, the European Medicines Agency approved the jab for adults of all ages.

Both Germany and France would reverse their decisions, but the reputation of the vaccine had been damaged. Some doctors in France had to throw away doses because nobody was turning up to get the jab.

Image source, Getty Images
Image caption,
When France restarted using the vaccine, its prime minister, Jean Castex, received the AZ jab live on TV in a bid to restore public confidence

So how could this have happened? It is complicated, so bear with me.

The AstraZeneca - or AZ for short - vaccine was approved in the UK and EU for older adults before firm evidence showing it protected them from Covid. The trials demonstrated it protected younger volunteers. But the older adults had been recruited later. Their blood samples showed the vaccine produced a very strong immune response to coronavirus - just as it did in younger volunteers.

So an assumption was made that it would protect the elderly just as well as younger people. This turned out to be correct. In the midst of a pandemic, with vaccines desperately needed, regulators decided to approve the jab for older adults, who were most at risk from Covid. But France and Germany were more cautious.

Image source, Getty Images
Image caption,
On the same day as the French prime minister, Boris Johnson received his first dose of AstraZeneca in London

At the same time, AZ was becoming embroiled in a major row about supplies. Its Covid vaccine was being manufactured in both the UK and the EU. Because the UK had been guaranteed priority in a deal agreed before the rest of Europe, the company says it was unable to send vaccines from British plants to supplement the EU stock. Meanwhile, one million doses had already gone to the UK from an EU plant.

At the height of the crisis, the European Commission threatened to halt vaccine exports to the UK unless Europe got its "fair share".

But what sealed the vaccine's poor reputation among many across Europe was the emergence in March of a link to rare blood clots. Germany, France, Ireland, Italy, Austria and Denmark were among many nations that suspended use of the vaccine.

The overall risk of blood clots is very low - estimated at one in 65,000 overall - but slightly higher in younger adults. When European regulators declared that the vaccine's benefits outweighed its risks, most lifted their suspension - but put age restrictions on the vaccine.

In the UK public confidence and pride in the vaccine remained high, even after the jab was restricted to over-40s because of the link to rare blood clots.

But when it came to deciding on booster doses in the UK, the clots issue and the simplicity of the Pfizer or Moderna mRNA jabs not being age-restricted, sealed the AZ vaccine's fate. It is registered as a booster vaccine here, but it proved simpler to give the majority of people Pfizer or Moderna - even though this was a far more expensive option. Since then, evidence has shown that mixing different types of vaccine may offer better protection.

Elsewhere in Europe many saw the AZ vaccine as either unsafe or inferior - it was nicknamed the "Aldi vaccine" in Belgium, after the supermarket, because it was seen as a budget option.

But it had been designed to be cheap. Its developers had had the ambition that it should be available at low cost, throughout the world. Unlike the mRNA vaccines it could be transported and stored at fridge temperature, making it easier to administer in remote regions.

AZ agreed to license global production and distribution of the jab, to be sold not-for-profit, for about £3 a dose - a fifth of the price of the Pfizer's jab.

A key player in this deal was the Serum Institute in India, the world's largest manufacturer of vaccines. It agreed to produce more than one billion doses for low- and middle-income countries. But when the devastating Delta wave of Covid struck India in spring 2021, its government blocked vaccines leaving the country for more than six months, making a global shortage of vaccines even more acute.

Image source, Getty Images
Image caption,
A woman reading a poster saying "vaccine out of stock" outside a vaccination centre in Mumbai in April 2021

"Once India shut that door…the sense was we are truly well and truly done for because at that point, that was the only hope," says Dr Ayoade Alakija of the African Union Vaccine Delivery Alliance.

The difference between rich and poor countries was extreme. In September 2021, when the UK, US, France and others were starting to offer booster doses, just one in 100 people in low income countries had been double-jabbed.

"By the time you got through the first half of 2021, enough doses have been manufactured that could have prevented almost all of the deaths in the second half of 2021 - if those doses had been targeted at older adults, those with health conditions and healthcare workers all over the world," Prof Andrew Pollard from the Oxford Vaccine Group told us.

"We haven't got it right. But how do you make politicians comfortable with the moral imperative that there should be in a pandemic?"

Global vaccine rollout

Scroll table
World
61
12,120,524,547
China
87
3,403,643,000
India
66
1,978,918,170
US
67
596,233,489
Brazil
79
456,903,089
Indonesia
61
417,522,347
Japan
81
285,756,540
Bangladesh
72
278,785,812
Pakistan
57
273,365,003
Vietnam
83
233,534,502
Mexico
61
209,179,257
Germany
76
182,926,984
Russia
51
168,992,435
Philippines
64
153,852,751
Iran
68
149,957,751
UK
73
149,397,250
Turkey
62
147,839,557
France
78
146,197,822
Thailand
76
139,099,244
Italy
79
138,319,018
South Korea
87
126,015,059
Argentina
82
106,075,760
Spain
87
95,153,556
Egypt
36
91,447,330
Canada
83
86,256,122
Colombia
71
85,767,160
Peru
83
77,892,776
Malaysia
83
71,272,417
Saudi Arabia
71
66,700,629
Myanmar
49
62,259,560
Chile
92
59,605,701
Taiwan
82
58,215,158
Australia
84
57,927,802
Uzbekistan
46
55,782,994
Morocco
63
54,846,507
Poland
60
54,605,119
Nigeria
10
50,619,238
Ethiopia
32
49,687,694
Nepal
69
46,888,075
Cambodia
85
40,956,960
Sri Lanka
68
39,586,599
Cuba
88
38,725,766
Venezuela
50
37,860,994
South Africa
32
36,861,626
Ecuador
78
35,827,364
Netherlands
70
33,326,378
Ukraine
35
31,668,577
Mozambique
44
31,616,078
Belgium
79
25,672,563
United Arab Emirates
98
24,922,054
Portugal
87
24,616,852
Rwanda
65
22,715,578
Sweden
75
22,674,504
Uganda
24
21,756,456
Greece
74
21,111,318
Kazakhstan
49
20,918,681
Angola
21
20,397,115
Ghana
23
18,643,437
Iraq
18
18,636,865
Kenya
17
18,535,975
Austria
73
18,418,001
Israel
66
18,190,799
Guatemala
35
17,957,760
Hong Kong
86
17,731,631
Czech Republic
64
17,676,269
Romania
42
16,827,486
Hungary
64
16,530,488
Dominican Republic
55
15,784,815
Switzerland
69
15,759,752
Algeria
15
15,205,854
Honduras
53
14,444,316
Singapore
92
14,225,122
Bolivia
51
13,892,966
Tajikistan
52
13,782,905
Azerbaijan
47
13,772,531
Denmark
82
13,227,724
Belarus
67
13,206,203
Tunisia
53
13,192,714
Ivory Coast
20
12,753,769
Finland
78
12,168,388
Zimbabwe
31
12,006,503
Nicaragua
82
11,441,278
Norway
74
11,413,904
New Zealand
80
11,165,408
Costa Rica
81
11,017,624
Ireland
81
10,984,032
El Salvador
66
10,958,940
Laos
69
10,894,482
Jordan
44
10,007,983
Paraguay
48
8,952,310
Tanzania
7
8,837,371
Uruguay
83
8,682,129
Serbia
48
8,534,688
Panama
71
8,366,229
Sudan
10
8,179,010
Kuwait
77
8,120,613
Zambia
24
7,199,179
Turkmenistan
48
7,140,000
Slovakia
51
7,076,057
Oman
58
7,068,002
Qatar
90
6,981,756
Afghanistan
13
6,445,359
Guinea
20
6,329,141
Lebanon
35
5,673,326
Mongolia
65
5,492,919
Croatia
55
5,258,768
Lithuania
70
4,489,177
Bulgaria
30
4,413,874
Syria
10
4,232,490
Palestinian Territories
34
3,734,270
Benin
22
3,681,560
Libya
17
3,579,762
Niger
10
3,530,154
DR Congo
2
3,514,480
Sierra Leone
23
3,493,386
Bahrain
70
3,455,214
Togo
18
3,290,821
Kyrgyzstan
20
3,154,348
Somalia
10
3,143,630
Slovenia
59
2,996,484
Burkina Faso
7
2,947,625
Albania
43
2,906,126
Georgia
32
2,902,085
Latvia
70
2,893,861
Mauritania
28
2,872,677
Botswana
63
2,730,607
Liberia
41
2,716,330
Mauritius
74
2,559,789
Senegal
6
2,523,856
Mali
6
2,406,986
Madagascar
4
2,369,775
Chad
12
2,356,138
Malawi
8
2,166,402
Moldova
26
2,165,600
Armenia
33
2,150,112
Estonia
64
1,993,944
Bosnia and Herzegovina
26
1,924,950
Bhutan
86
1,910,077
North Macedonia
40
1,850,145
Cameroon
4
1,838,907
Kosovo
46
1,830,809
Cyprus
72
1,788,761
Timor-Leste
52
1,638,158
Fiji
70
1,609,748
Trinidad and Tobago
51
1,574,574
Jamaica
24
1,459,394
Macau
89
1,441,062
Malta
91
1,317,628
Luxembourg
73
1,304,777
South Sudan
10
1,226,772
Central African Republic
22
1,217,399
Brunei
97
1,173,118
Guyana
58
1,011,150
Maldives
71
945,036
Lesotho
34
933,825
Yemen
1
864,544
Congo
12
831,318
Namibia
16
825,518
Gambia
14
812,811
Iceland
79
805,469
Cape Verde
55
773,810
Montenegro
45
675,285
Comoros
34
642,320
Papua New Guinea
3
615,156
Guinea-Bissau
17
572,954
Gabon
11
567,575
Eswatini
29
535,393
Suriname
40
505,699
Samoa
99
494,684
Belize
53
489,508
Equatorial Guinea
14
484,554
Solomon Islands
25
463,637
Haiti
1
342,724
Bahamas
40
340,866
Barbados
53
316,212
Vanuatu
40
309,433
Tonga
91
242,634
Jersey
80
236,026
Djibouti
16
222,387
Seychelles
82
221,597
Sao Tome and Principe
44
218,850
Isle of Man
79
189,994
Guernsey
81
157,161
Andorra
69
153,383
Kiribati
50
147,497
Cayman Islands
90
145,906
Bermuda
77
131,612
Antigua and Barbuda
63
126,122
Saint Lucia
29
121,513
Gibraltar
123
119,855
Faroe Islands
83
103,894
Grenada
34
89,147
Greenland
68
79,745
St Vincent and the Grenadines
28
71,501
Liechtenstein
69
70,780
Turks and Caicos Islands
76
69,803
San Marino
69
69,338
Dominica
42
66,992
Monaco
65
65,140
Saint Kitts and Nevis
49
60,467
British Virgin Islands
59
41,198
Cook Islands
84
39,780
Anguilla
67
23,926
Nauru
79
22,976
Burundi
0.12
17,139
Tuvalu
52
12,528
Saint Helena
58
7,892
Montserrat
38
4,422
Falkland Islands
50
4,407
Niue
88
4,161
Tokelau
71
1,936
Pitcairn
100
94
British Indian Ocean Territory
0
0
Eritrea
0
0
North Korea
0
0
South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands
0
0
Vatican
0
0

Please upgrade your browser to see the full interactive

Dr Bruce Aylward of the World Health Organization is scathing about what he regards as the failure of the world to distribute vaccines fairly.

"We're giving this virus the opportunity to evolve, to mutate, to present in more rapidly transmissible or deadly forms. We're going to be deep into 2022 before we have this pandemic under control, because that's how long it's going to take to get vaccines rolled out equitably around the world."

The UK government, which invested £88m in the vaccine's development, has so far donated 30m doses of AZ as part of its commitment to give away 100m Covid vaccines overall. The first UK donations did not happen until late July 2021.

The former health secretary Matt Hancock said the UK's main contribution was giving the science and wherewithal for others globally to produce the jab. "Give a man the tools and teach them how to fish. And that is far more powerful in terms of saving lives than any number of vaccines we could have manufactured here and then physically exported on an aeroplane."

In recent months, global supplies and promises of vaccine donations have increased significantly. But millions of donated doses have only weeks left before they expire, and not all can be used in time. There is also the issue of vaccine hesitancy which is a significant hurdle in many parts of the world.

Despite all the problems, more than 2.5 billion doses of the Oxford-AstraZeneca jab have been delivered to 183 nations, nearly two-thirds to low and middle-income countries. It will continue to be sold at cost to developing nations while the company says it will make a "modest profit" elsewhere. It is impossible to calculate how many lives have been saved by the vaccine, but the company estimates it to be more than a million.

More than a quarter of the 10 billion doses of Covid jabs administered globally have been AstraZeneca, a vaccine created by a small team at a British university and sold at cost. Other Covid vaccines, by contrast, have created nine billionaires.

Despite the public relations mauling that AstraZeneca has received in Europe and the US over the vaccine, the company's chief executive, Pascal Soriot, said he'd pursue the non-profit route again in a future pandemic. But he was candid about the issues surrounding vaccine equity, and the muscular way wealthier nations snapped up doses before poorer ones.

"You can't change human beings," he said. "They are going to take care of themselves and their families first, their neighbours second and the rest of the world third. You would have hoped that export bans didn't exist and vaccines flowed across the world much more freely, but you just have to accept the reality."

Watch AstraZeneca: A Vaccine for the World? on BBC Two Tuesday 8 February at 21:00, or later on the BBC iPlayer (UK only).