Skip to main content
Conference

Equitable Vaccine Distribution: Insights on Covid-19 from past public health emergencies

How can we roll out of vaccines equitably – both across and within countries – to contain the Covid-19 pandemic? The third Yale Development Dialogue explores vaccination efforts from history to shed light on the current challenge.

Event Details

  • Hosts: Yale Economic Growth Center, the South Asian Studies Council at Yale MacMillan Center, and theJackson Institute for Global Affairs
  • Equitable Vaccine Distribution: Insights on Covid-19 from past public health emergencies – the third in the series, "The Yale Development Dialogues: Economic Policy Lessons from History"
  • Date and time: Tuesday February 9, 2021, 9:30AM EST (14:30 GMT, 20:00 IST)


Event Description

The pace of development for Covid-19 vaccines was nothing short of remarkable. But, as is often said, vaccines don’t save lives, vaccinations do. And a number of challenges stand in the way of equitable vaccine distribution. 

What are the most promising strategies to support the roll out of vaccines, in order to contain the Covid-19 pandemic, and allow society to resume many of the educational, social, and economic activities that have been disrupted over the past year? What policies and partnerships can ensure that vaccines reach low- and middle-income countries as well as historically marginalized groups within those contexts? 

History offers lessons for ways to deal with challenges ranging from vaccine hesitancy to vaccine nationalism. What are some of the key takeaways for global coverage and acceptance of the Covid-19 vaccine? The issue of trust in public health has posed a problem for decades, and if the global health community can overcome challenges of distribution, there may be an opportunity to build trust ahead of future pandemics. 

 An early 19th century cartoon of a chaotic medical environment with a woman receiving a vaccine

An 1802 cartoon by British satirist James Gillray caricatured a London smallpox clinic and reflected anxieties concerning inoculating against the disease. Courtesy, US Library of Congress.

Panelists

Caitjan Gainty
Caitjan Gainty

Caitjan Gainty  is a historian of twentieth century medicine and technology at King's College London. Her research examines the systematization of medicine and healthcare and the way notions of its significance and effectiveness have evolved historically. She serves as Principal Investigator for the Healthy Scepticism project, which examines the role of medicine's critics and detractors, its dispossessed and antagonists in the constitution of its contemporary form.

Saad B. Omer
Saad Omer

Saad B. Omer  is the inaugural Director of Yale Institute for Global Health. He is also a Professor of Medicine (Infectious Diseases) at Yale School of Medicine and the Susan Dwight Bliss Professor of Epidemiology of Microbial Diseases at Yale School of Public Health. Dr Omer’s research portfolio includes epidemiology of respiratory viruses such as influenza, RSV, and Covid-19. He has conducted several studies on interventions to increase immunization coverage and acceptance.

Rory Stewart
Rory Stewart

Rory Stewart is a Senior Fellow at Yale Jackson Institute for Global Affairs, where he focuses on contemporary politics in crisis and on international development and intervention in fragile and conflict affected states. Stewart served as the UK Secretary of State for International Development where he doubled the U.K.’s investment in international climate and environment.

Moderator

Catherine Cheney
Catherine Cheney

Catherine Cheney ‘10 is a Senior Reporter for Devex, covering the West Coast of the U.S., focusing on the role of technology, innovation, and philanthropy in achieving the Sustainable Development Goals.

The Yale Development Dialogues