The COVID-19 Pandemic and Access to Vaccination in Bangladesh: A Critical Review

This paper delineates the diverse perspectives of the vicious COVID-19 pandemic and access to vaccination in Bangladesh. It also depicts the discrepancies as to access to vaccine and vaccination campaign aside from assorted socio-economic impacts and challenges in Bangladesh with plausible way-outs....

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Md. Emdadul Haque
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Academic Research and Publishing UG (i. G.) 2022-09-01
Series:Health Economics and Management Review
Subjects:
Online Access:https://armgpublishing.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/09/hem_3_2022_89_98.pdf
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1850185029354782720
author Md. Emdadul Haque
author_facet Md. Emdadul Haque
author_sort Md. Emdadul Haque
collection DOAJ
description This paper delineates the diverse perspectives of the vicious COVID-19 pandemic and access to vaccination in Bangladesh. It also depicts the discrepancies as to access to vaccine and vaccination campaign aside from assorted socio-economic impacts and challenges in Bangladesh with plausible way-outs. The fight for combating the demonized coronavirus is laudable amid the country’s limited resources, vulnerable healthcare system and vaccine hesitation. But the estimated cost of vaccination is under criticism because the country has received a substantial amount of vaccines as gift or free of cost donation from rich countries especially from the United States. Due to the pandemic, the socio-economic loss sustained by the country has created extra burden for the economy. No doubt, the coronavirus has taken an acid test of the global healthcare system. Even the economically advanced countries with sophisticated healthcare facilities have experienced the horrific fatality of the pandemic for a long time. But during the pandemic, the world has witnessed further polarization of the countries with major political and economic power dynamics in the name of coordinated fighting of the persisting crisis. Together with the financial constraints of low-income countries in Africa and Asia, the vaccine crisis and monopoly caused by the profit-driven attitude of most multinational pharma companies and geopolitical interests of some high income countries have galvanized the global vaccine inequity undermining the notion of distributive justice with a few exceptions. But the contagious coronavirus taught that people’s safety of a particular country is not possible without safety of other countries. Most existing papers on the COVID-19 pandemic linking Bangladesh depict its various detrimental impacts from health science and socio-economic aspects. But this paper critically reviews the chronological aspects of the COVID-19 pandemic in Bangladesh starting from influx of the virus to its all-out combating measures highlighting human casualty, advent of vaccine, vaccine inequity, access to vaccination, vaccine diplomacy, campaign, hesitation and rerated constraints along with prevailing as well as post COVID-19 socio-economic impacts.
format Article
id doaj-art-c3ba2f2f34f34117af0839458581ae63
institution OA Journals
issn 2786-4626
2786-4634
language English
publishDate 2022-09-01
publisher Academic Research and Publishing UG (i. G.)
record_format Article
series Health Economics and Management Review
spelling doaj-art-c3ba2f2f34f34117af0839458581ae632025-08-20T02:16:50ZengAcademic Research and Publishing UG (i. G.)Health Economics and Management Review2786-46262786-46342022-09-0133899810.61093/hem.2022.3-09The COVID-19 Pandemic and Access to Vaccination in Bangladesh: A Critical ReviewMd. Emdadul Haque0https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7606-1825LLM, Rajshahi University, Bangladesh; DTP Alumnus, University of New South Wales (UNSW), Australia This paper delineates the diverse perspectives of the vicious COVID-19 pandemic and access to vaccination in Bangladesh. It also depicts the discrepancies as to access to vaccine and vaccination campaign aside from assorted socio-economic impacts and challenges in Bangladesh with plausible way-outs. The fight for combating the demonized coronavirus is laudable amid the country’s limited resources, vulnerable healthcare system and vaccine hesitation. But the estimated cost of vaccination is under criticism because the country has received a substantial amount of vaccines as gift or free of cost donation from rich countries especially from the United States. Due to the pandemic, the socio-economic loss sustained by the country has created extra burden for the economy. No doubt, the coronavirus has taken an acid test of the global healthcare system. Even the economically advanced countries with sophisticated healthcare facilities have experienced the horrific fatality of the pandemic for a long time. But during the pandemic, the world has witnessed further polarization of the countries with major political and economic power dynamics in the name of coordinated fighting of the persisting crisis. Together with the financial constraints of low-income countries in Africa and Asia, the vaccine crisis and monopoly caused by the profit-driven attitude of most multinational pharma companies and geopolitical interests of some high income countries have galvanized the global vaccine inequity undermining the notion of distributive justice with a few exceptions. But the contagious coronavirus taught that people’s safety of a particular country is not possible without safety of other countries. Most existing papers on the COVID-19 pandemic linking Bangladesh depict its various detrimental impacts from health science and socio-economic aspects. But this paper critically reviews the chronological aspects of the COVID-19 pandemic in Bangladesh starting from influx of the virus to its all-out combating measures highlighting human casualty, advent of vaccine, vaccine inequity, access to vaccination, vaccine diplomacy, campaign, hesitation and rerated constraints along with prevailing as well as post COVID-19 socio-economic impacts.https://armgpublishing.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/09/hem_3_2022_89_98.pdfcovid-19 pandemicadverse impactsaccess to vaccinevaccination campaignvaccine hesitancydiplomacychallenges and opportunities
spellingShingle Md. Emdadul Haque
The COVID-19 Pandemic and Access to Vaccination in Bangladesh: A Critical Review
Health Economics and Management Review
covid-19 pandemic
adverse impacts
access to vaccine
vaccination campaign
vaccine hesitancy
diplomacy
challenges and opportunities
title The COVID-19 Pandemic and Access to Vaccination in Bangladesh: A Critical Review
title_full The COVID-19 Pandemic and Access to Vaccination in Bangladesh: A Critical Review
title_fullStr The COVID-19 Pandemic and Access to Vaccination in Bangladesh: A Critical Review
title_full_unstemmed The COVID-19 Pandemic and Access to Vaccination in Bangladesh: A Critical Review
title_short The COVID-19 Pandemic and Access to Vaccination in Bangladesh: A Critical Review
title_sort covid 19 pandemic and access to vaccination in bangladesh a critical review
topic covid-19 pandemic
adverse impacts
access to vaccine
vaccination campaign
vaccine hesitancy
diplomacy
challenges and opportunities
url https://armgpublishing.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/09/hem_3_2022_89_98.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT mdemdadulhaque thecovid19pandemicandaccesstovaccinationinbangladeshacriticalreview
AT mdemdadulhaque covid19pandemicandaccesstovaccinationinbangladeshacriticalreview