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Bolivian City Uses Refrigerated Chicken Truck to Move COVID-19 Vaccines

RIO DE JANEIRO, BRAZIL – A Bolivian city has resorted to using a refrigerated chicken truck to keep COVID-19 vaccines cold, a reflection of how the pandemic is straining resources in developing countries as they look to ramp up inoculations with limited infrastructure.

A refrigerated truck which is normally used to transport chicken carries Sputnik V vaccines in Trinidad, Beni, Bolivia February 1, 2021. Picture taken February 1, 2021. Edmundo Gaston Sosa/Handout via REUTERS

Vaccines doses that arrived in the central city of Trinidad were taken from the plane to a truck with a picture of a cartoon chicken on the side, normally used to delivery poultry, after a health service vehicle broke down.

“Yesterday there was damage to a vehicle that (health service) SEDES had arranged to transport the vaccines and they had to make an emergency appeal to a firm that also has trucks with cold storage,” said Jorge Richter, a government spokesman.

“When we now receive the vaccines from the COVAX plan, we will also have to take the services of many other companies because there will be around 200 boxes of vaccines.”

Bolivia has had 218,000 confirmed cases of COVID-19 and over 10,000 deaths. The country is now seeing a sharp rise in new infections, though it has recently received a batch of Russian Sputnik V doses to start its inoculation program.

It also expects to receive later this month its first 1 million doses of vaccine via the COVAX program jointly led by the World Health Organization.

Residents in the city watched the chicken truck’s arrival with interest and put the Bolivian flag onto it when it left the airport. “This looks like something the department authorities did not plan for,” said Edmundo Gaston, a Trinidad resident.

“But looking at the big picture, I don’t think it creates any health problems as it’s just a means of transporting (the vaccines) from one place to another.”

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