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Which Covid-19 vaccine would you get?

Which COVID vaccine will you take when available

  • Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine

    Votes: 3 30.0%
  • Moderna

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Oxford/Astrazeneca

    Votes: 4 40.0%
  • Johnson&Johnson

    Votes: 2 20.0%
  • GSK/Sanofi

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Sinopharm

    Votes: 1 10.0%
  • Sputnik V

    Votes: 0 0.0%

  • Total voters
    10
  • Poll closed .
Pfizer wants to make vaccine in India if faster clearance, export freedom assured

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-health-coronavirus-india-pfizer/exclusive-pfizer-wants-to-make-vaccine-in-india-if-faster-clearance-export-freedom-assured-sources-idUSKBN2B21AY

Pfizer Inc has told the Indian government it wants to produce its coronavirus vaccine locally if assured of faster regulatory clearance and freedom on pricing and exports, two sources with direct knowledge of the matter told Reuters.

The U.S. company pulled an application last month seeking emergency approval for its product in India after the drug regulator declined its request to skip a small local safety trial. That has kept its vaccine, developed with Germany’s BioNTech SE, out of one of the world’s biggest drug markets.

Pfizer was the first company to apply for emergency use authorisation in India, proposing to import doses from its U.S. and European facilities instead of producing locally.

“U.S. companies want to produce vaccines in India under joint ventures,” said one of the sources, citing Pfizer and fellow U.S. drugmaker Moderna Inc.

“They want faster approvals for clinical trials and emergency authorisation use. They fear the government will introduce price control policies.”

Another source confirmed Pfizer was interested in manufacturing in India but Reuters could not find a second confirmation on Moderna.

The companies did not immediately respond to requests for comment. India’s health ministry directed Reuters to the foreign ministry, which did not immediately respond to emailed queries.

While withdrawing its application in early February, Pfizer said it would again seek emergency use approval to launch its COVID-19 vaccine in India, potentially a market of 1.35 billion people, and would provide more data as it becomes available.

On the government’s demand to manufacture in India, the company earlier told Reuters: “Once the pandemic supply phase is over and we enter a phase of regular supplies, Pfizer will evaluate all additional opportunities available.”

A Indian official told Reuters in January the government had held discussions with Pfizer and Moderna - both of which have reported more than 90% efficacy for their vaccines - to make the shots in India given its large pharmaceuticals capacity.

The Serum Institute of India, the world’s largest vaccine maker, is already bulk-manufacturing the Oxford University/AstraZeneca product and plans to start producing the Novavax Inc shot from next month.

India’s government has not allowed it to sell on the higher-priced private market, however, and is also controlling exports. Pfizer and Moderna, whose shots are more expensive than the AstraZeneca one being used in India’s immunisation campaign, are not comfortable with strict price and export restrictions, one of the sources said.

This week, Reuters reported that leaders of the Quad alliance - Australia, Japan, India and the United States - plan to announce financing agreements to increase India’s vaccine manufacturing capacity at their first meeting on Friday.

The initiative will mainly involve production of the Novavax and Johnson & Johnson shots for supplying to regions including Southeast Asia, where their common rival China is making gains.
 
Denmark stops with the AstraZeneca vaccine for 2 weeks. Seems like some research for possible side effects.
 
Pfizer vaccine production on the rise as pandemic hits one-year mark

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-health-coronavirus-pfizer/pfizer-vaccine-production-on-the-rise-as-pandemic-hits-one-year-mark-idUSKBN2B32HN

Pfizer Inc and BioNTech SE will exceed their original global target for COVID-19 vaccines by as much as 20% this year, producing 2.3 billion to 2.4 billion doses, Pfizer Chief Executive Albert Bourla said on Thursday.

The companies also released real-world data from Israel earlier on Thursday showing their vaccine was 94% effective in preventing asymptomatic infections, suggesting it could significantly reduce virus transmission.

“These are stunning numbers that are giving us a clear indication that liberation is coming,” Bourla said in an interview on the one-year anniversary of the World Health Organization declaring COVID-19 a pandemic. “It is a testament to the power of science, and the power of human ingenuity.”

More than 2.7 million people around the world have died from COVID-19 so far.

Bourla said that by the fourth quarter of this year, Pfizer and BioNTech will reach a 3 billion dose a year production run rate, and should be able to produce that much next year.

The companies will clearly exceed their original target of 2 billion doses in 2021, he said.

Pfizer has said it expects revenue of at least $15 billion from its half of the vaccine sales this year.

Middle-income countries will pay around half the price as high income countries for their doses, and low income countries will get the vaccine at cost, Bourla said.

Pfizer expects to meet its commitment of supplying 120 million coronavirus vaccine doses to the U.S. government by the end of March. That would require them to deliver another 60 million doses over the next three weeks.

“Those have already been manufactured” and are currently being tested for quality, he said.

“Unless a batch (of vaccine) fails, we will be able to provide them. Our track record is that our batches don’t fail,” he said.

Pfizer’s German partner BioNTech began developing the vaccine last January and the U.S. drugmaker signed on in early March as the health crisis accelerated. Their vaccine received its first regulatory authorizations in December.

In the United States, the vaccine is authorized for use in people aged 16 or older. Bourla said the company plans to submit data for children aged 12 to 16 very soon.

He said his assumption was that the vaccine should be authorized for that age range by the fall, adding that data on children aged 5 to 11 can be expected by year-end.
 
Oxford-AstraZeneca: EU says 'no indication' vaccine linked to clots

There is no indication that the Oxford-AstraZeneca Covid-19 vaccine is linked to an increased risk of blood clots, the EU's medicines regulator says.

It said the number of cases in vaccinated people was no higher than in the general population.

The statement came after a number of countries, including Denmark and Norway, suspended the use of the jab.

The suspension followed reports that a small number of people had developed clots after receiving the vaccine.

There were also reports that a 50-year-old man had died in Italy after developing deep vein thrombosis (DVT) following a dose of the jab.

"There is currently no indication that vaccination has caused these conditions, which are not listed as side effects with this vaccine," the European Medicines Agency (EMA) said on Thursday.

"The vaccine's benefits continue to outweigh its risks and the vaccine can continue to be administered while investigation of cases of thromboembolic events is ongoing," it added.

It said there had been 30 cases of "thromboembolic events" among the five million Europeans who have received the jab.

AstraZeneca said the drug's safety had been studied extensively in clinical trials. "Regulators have clear and stringent efficacy and safety standards for the approval of any new medicine," a spokesperson said.

In the UK, the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) said there was no evidence the vaccine had caused problems, and people should still go and get vaccinated when asked to do so. "Blood clots can occur naturally and are not uncommon. More than 11 million doses of the Covid-19 AstraZeneca vaccine have now been administered across the UK," said Phil Bryan of the MHRA.

The decision to temporarily suspend the use of AstraZeneca's jab has come as a setback for a European vaccination campaign that has stuttered into life, partly due to delays in delivery of the drug.

However, there was a positive development on Thursday as the EMA approved the single-shot Johnson & Johnson (J&J) vaccine. "More safe and effective vaccines are coming to the market," EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen tweeted, although some reports suggest that J&J vaccine shipments may not arrive until April.

It comes on the same day a study revealed that the US Novax vaccine is 96% effective in preventing the original strain of covid and 86% effective against the English strain. Novavax is hoping to file for approval in the UK during the second quarter of 2021, AFP news agency reports.

Source: https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-56357760.
 
There is not enough data to jump to any conclusions. The problem is that the anti-vaccine community will latch onto anything that gives them the opportunity to criticize the vaccine and exaggerate its side-effects.

I know consultants in the UK and they agree that the issue is overblown and there is no evidence whatsoever to establish the link. Moreover, even if there is, it is a more manageable situation than getting COVID.

This is going to happen in Pakistan as well as vaccinations are being rolled out now for the general public (65 and above). My grandmother (87) and my father (68) received their first shots yesterday.

As more and more elderly are vaccinated, some of them will die soon after getting the vaccine and you can bet that people will blame the vaccine.

Are they offering only the Sinopharm vaccine across Pakistan or other types are being rolled out too? I know the odd location in Lahore that is thus far only offering Sinovac.
 
Are they offering only the Sinopharm vaccine across Pakistan or other types are being rolled out too? I know the odd location in Lahore that is thus far only offering Sinovac.

Sinovac has just about 50 per cent efficacy. It should be the last option.
 
Sinovac has just about 50 per cent efficacy. It should be the last option.

Yes, I agree.

However, it's the only option available at the moment and most folks I know have chosen to get their parents and grandparents vaccinated with Sinovac.

I am not confident that Pfizer or Moderna will be readily available in Pakistan this year.
 
Yes, I agree.

However, it's the only option available at the moment and most folks I know have chosen to get their parents and grandparents vaccinated with Sinovac.

I am not confident that Pfizer or Moderna will be readily available in Pakistan this year.

Wait till covishield is available.
 
Are they offering only the Sinopharm vaccine across Pakistan or other types are being rolled out too? I know the odd location in Lahore that is thus far only offering Sinovac.

So far yes, but Sputnik-V will be available soon.
 
Are they offering only the Sinopharm vaccine across Pakistan or other types are being rolled out too? I know the odd location in Lahore that is thus far only offering Sinovac.

Do you mean you found Sinovac in Lahore or Sinopharm? They are two different vaccines. As far as I know Sinopharm has 80% efficacy (if you are willing to take their word for it i.e.) while Sinovac has 50%. Sinopharm is the one that UAE is using and i think it is the one offered in Pakistan.
 
Do you mean you found Sinovac in Lahore or Sinopharm? They are two different vaccines. As far as I know Sinopharm has 80% efficacy (if you are willing to take their word for it i.e.) while Sinovac has 50%. Sinopharm is the one that UAE is using and i think it is the one offered in Pakistan.

Yes, there are two separate Chinese vaccines. I am given to understand that both Sinopharm and Sinovac were shipped to Pakistan for emergency test trials. Although the authorities aren't being upfront about which vaccine is in use currently.

Officially the government received a shipment of half a million doses of the Sinopharm vaccine at the start of February, whereas a further 1.1 million additional doses of vaccines from China were anticipated at the start of this month.

However, it was unclear whether the additional doses were a mix of Sinopharm and Sinovac or exclusively of one type. Word among some healthcare professionals is that some centres have access to the Sinopharm vaccine, whereas others have Sinovac. It's very unclear at the moment.
 
Wait till covishield is available.

And why covishield ?

when sinovac has done well in the far East , turkey was happy with it

and sinopharm the other vaccine has been approved in uae and bahrain.

Turkey and Indonesia are happily administering sinovac .


Most of the hurrah and bad press and noise is actually about the astrazenca also called covishield also called Oxford.
Its not the rest of the world who has caused it but the progressive Europeans even before the blood clot story countries like Germany and even Canada said that the Oxford is in effective for over 65s , so the continued news stories and scandals have one name in common Oxford vaccine every month there is some bad press about this vaccine.


China is also giving flexible loans to poor countries for its vaccines.

And considering how well China has handled this pandemic and then compare it to the bungling uk and Europeans I trust the Chinese.
 
Yes, there are two separate Chinese vaccines. I am given to understand that both Sinopharm and Sinovac were shipped to Pakistan for emergency test trials. Although the authorities aren't being upfront about which vaccine is in use currently.

Officially the government received a shipment of half a million doses of the Sinopharm vaccine at the start of February, whereas a further 1.1 million additional doses of vaccines from China were anticipated at the start of this month.

However, it was unclear whether the additional doses were a mix of Sinopharm and Sinovac or exclusively of one type. Word among some healthcare professionals is that some centres have access to the Sinopharm vaccine, whereas others have Sinovac. It's very unclear at the moment.

Interesting. Sinopharm would certainly be the better choice if they are willing to disclose the name of the vaccine. As UAE has vaccinated almost half of its population and is testing almost everyone on a regular basis, I think they would have a good idea of the efficacy even if they dont disclose their data. But there were recently some unconfirmed news reports even about Sinopharm that UAE was planning to give vaccinated people a third shot because two were not producing an adequate response.
 
And why covishield ?

when sinovac has done well in the far East , turkey was happy with it

and sinopharm the other vaccine has been approved in uae and bahrain.

Turkey and Indonesia are happily administering sinovac .


Most of the hurrah and bad press and noise is actually about the astrazenca also called covishield also called Oxford.
Its not the rest of the world who has caused it but the progressive Europeans even before the blood clot story countries like Germany and even Canada said that the Oxford is in effective for over 65s , so the continued news stories and scandals have one name in common Oxford vaccine every month there is some bad press about this vaccine.


China is also giving flexible loans to poor countries for its vaccines.

And considering how well China has handled this pandemic and then compare it to the bungling uk and Europeans I trust the Chinese.

The western countries you named have not approved any chinese vaccine. Not even for testing.

We only have the word of the chinese regarding their vaccine and their handling of covid.
 
Interesting. Sinopharm would certainly be the better choice if they are willing to disclose the name of the vaccine. As UAE has vaccinated almost half of its population and is testing almost everyone on a regular basis, I think they would have a good idea of the efficacy even if they dont disclose their data. But there were recently some unconfirmed news reports even about Sinopharm that UAE was planning to give vaccinated people a third shot because two were not producing an adequate response.

It is safe. Others in UAE would also attest to this fact
 
It is safe. Others in UAE would also attest to this fact

It is certainly safe. The doubts are more about efficacy than safety. There is some speculation that people vaccinated with two doses of Sinopharm in the UAE might need a third booster shot.
 
So far yes, but Sputnik-V will be available soon.

Thats the one I want to get. I will wait for it even if I can get the other ones before. Because the name sounds cool and I am a fan of Russia
 
Thats the one I want to get. I will wait for it even if I can get the other ones before. Because the name sounds cool and I am a fan of Russia

I thought you didn't like Trump lol. Anyways I wouldn't trust Putin, God knows what he put in the vaccine.
 
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-health-coronavirus-vaccine-russia-eu/putin-raps-eu-official-over-comments-on-sputnik-v-vaccine-idUSKBN2BE26Z

President Vladimir Putin hit back on Monday at a European Union official who said its members had absolutely no need for Russia’s Sputnik V vaccine, describing the comment as strange and suggesting it was at odds with EU citizens’ interests.

EU’s Internal Market Commissioner Thierry Breton had said the EU did not need the Sputnik V vaccine against COVID-19 and could achieve immunity across the continent using European production.

“It’s a strange statement. We’re not imposing anything on anyone,” Putin said at a televised meeting about Russian vaccines.

“This raises a question: Whose interests are these people defending and representing? The interests of some pharmaceutical companies or those of the citizens of European countries?”

The European Medicines Agency (EMA), whose representatives are set to visit Russia next month, launched a rolling review of Sputnik V earlier this month.

But some European officials have called into question the need for the Russian vaccine.

An EMA official urged EU members this month to refrain from approving Sputnik V at a national level while the agency was still reviewing it.

Putin also held a phone call with European Council President Charles Michel to discuss the possible use of Sputnik V vaccine against COVID-19, the Kremlin said on Monday.

Earlier this month, Michel had cast doubt on Russia’s motives for promoting Sputnik V abroad, saying Moscow had organised limited but widely publicised operations to supply the vaccine to other countries.

Putin told Michel that Russia was ready to resume cooperation with the trade bloc but that ties were currently unsatisfactory due to the EU’s confrontational and unconstructive policies at times, the Kremlin said.
 
By that I mostly meant Russian History, culture, literature etc

Its not even a shadow of itself. Although defn the citizens (including) Serbia are very unique and have to say unlike Desis that just do optimizing(tech wise), the Russians and Serbs are helluva innovative..and are builders( incl their American Immigrants).

I feel its in their mentality to break free..
 
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/mar/23/vladimir-putin-to-get-covid-19-vaccination-on-tuesday

Vladimir Putin is scheduled to receive his first dose of a Russian-made coronavirus vaccine in private on Tuesday, after months of delaying his jab, in an apparent effort to boost Russia’s fledgling vaccination drive.

The Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said on Tuesday that the president would receive one of the three Russian-made vaccines, but he would release few other details, saying journalists would have to “trust his word” that Putin had been inoculated.

“The president has already done a lot to popularise the vaccine,” Peskov said. “As to being vaccinated on camera, well he has never been a fan of that, he doesn’t like that.”

It was a peculiar description of a president who has regularly undressed on camera during summer holidays in Siberia, for a baptismal dip in an ice-cold pool in January, and even at medical checkups in the past.

And the Kremlin decision to shroud Putin’s vaccination in secrecy is even odder considering the likely boost that Putin’s on-camera endorsement would give Russia’s vaccination drive.

As of this week, only 4.3% of Russians had received at least one dose of one of the country’s vaccines, predominately Sputnik V, which began mass distribution in December. In the UK, more than half the adult population have received at least one dose of a vaccine, and in the US 14% of the population have been fully vaccinated. Even in Germany, where the vaccine rollout has been viewed as a debacle, around 9% of the population have had at least one jab.

Russia’s vaccination rates have more resembled those in India and China, where a number of factors including infection rates, quarantine measures, different risk profiles and government distrust have kept vaccination rates below 5%.

Leaders of other countries including Joe Biden, Boris Johnson and Ukraine’s Volodymyr Zelenskiy have been vaccinated on camera to allay public concerns about the hastily developed vaccines. The highest-ranking official in Russia to have been vaccinated publicly is the defence minister, Sergei Shoigu.

Putin announced on Monday that he was planning to be vaccinated, but took special care to make clear that vaccinations in Russia would remain voluntary. “Vaccination, of course, is a voluntary decision for every person. It is every person’s personal decision,” Putin said during a televised government meeting on Monday about Russian vaccines against Covid-19. “By the way, I plan to do this tomorrow.”

Russians’ resistance to vaccination is partly rooted in belief in conspiracy theories and in distrust of the Sputnik V jab.

More than 60% of Russians polled by the Levada Centre in February said they did not plan to be vaccinated, in many cases because of cold-like side-effects, and a similar figure said they believed that the coronavirus was an artificial bioweapon rather than a naturally occurring disease that broke out in a market in the Chinese city of Wuhan last year.

Russia has sought to wield Sputnik V as a tool for geopolitical influence in other countries. Putin has called for Russia to export its vaccine, and more than 40 countries have to some degree registered or approved Sputnik V for emergency use. More than 1.2bn doses of the vaccine have been ordered, raising questions about whether Russian production capacity is up to the task.

Two other domestic vaccines, EpiVacCorona and CoviVac, have also been approved for use in Russia. Peskov said the Kremlin was not releasing the name of the vaccine used to inoculate Putin in order to avoid favouritism. “We won’t tell you on purpose which vaccine exactly it will be. All three Russian vaccines are absolutely reliable. They’re very good, reliable and efficacious,” Peskov said.
 
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-health-coronavirus-india-vaccine-excl/exclusive-india-likely-to-delay-covax-vaccine-supplies-for-march-april-says-unicef-idUSKBN2BG3FV

India will likely delay deliveries of AstraZeneca coronavirus vaccine doses to the GAVI/WHO-backed COVAX facility for March and April, the programme’s procurement and distributing partner UNICEF told Reuters early on Thursday.

“We understand that deliveries of COVID-19 vaccines to lower-income economies participating in the COVAX Facility will likely face delays following a setback in securing export licenses for further doses of COVID-19 vaccines produced by the Serum Institute of India (SII), expected to be shipped in March and April,” UNICEF said in an email.

“COVAX is in talks with the Government of India with a view to ensuring deliveries as quickly as possible.”

Reuters reported on Wednesday that India had put a temporary hold on all major exports of the AstraZeneca shot made by SII, the world’s biggest vaccine-maker, to meet domestic demand as infections rise.

UNICEF also said that COVAX participant countries have also been told about lower-than-expected supplies of AstraZeneca doses made in South Korea for March.

“In line with the challenges of the current global supply environment, this is due to challenges the company faces in rapidly scaling up supply and optimizing production processes for these early deliveries,” UNICEF said.
 
The head of the world’s largest vaccine manufacturer agreed to rent a property in Mayfair for about 50,000 pounds ($69,000) a week, a record for the exclusive London neighborhood, according to two people with knowledge of the transaction.

Adar Poonawalla, chief executive officer at the Serum Institute of India Ltd., is leasing the home on one of the district’s best roads from Polish billionaire Dominika Kulczyk, the people said, asking not to be identified as the deal is confidential.

The mansion is one of the largest residences in the neighborhood and measures about 25,000 square feet (2,322 square meters), the equivalent of about 24 average English homes. The property also comes with an adjoining guest house and backs onto one of Mayfair’s “secret gardens,” which are only accessible to residents.

A spokesperson for the Serum Institute declined to comment on behalf of Poonawalla. A spokesperson for Kulczyk declined to comment.

The deal will be a boost for the luxury homes market in central London, which has been hit by a combination of Brexit and the pandemic. Rents have fallen by 9.2% in the past five years in Mayfair, according to LonRes, a property data company.

There’s been a “massive increase” in demand for staffing from wealthy clients renting properties in London and the English countryside because they are upscaling or want a home with a bigger garden, according to Elaine Braid, chief executive officer at Poppy Lane Placements, a boutique agency supplying staff to luxury private homes.

Poonawalla, who is currently spearheading the production of millions of doses of AstraZeneca Plc’s Covid-19 vaccine, has long had links to the U.K. and studied at London’s University of Westminster. The businessman previously failed in a bid to buy the Grosvenor Hotel in Mayfair and turn part of it into a home.

Britain is “definitely a place I would want a second home,” he told Bloomberg News in a 2016 interview.

Poonawalla is part of one of the world’s richest families, which has a $15 billion fortune, the bulk of it derived from the vaccine maker, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index.

The stamp duty sales tax, which is higher for overseas purchasers and owners of multiple homes, may be deterring wealthy people from buying London properties, said Fred Scarlett, a director at luxury homes developer Clivedale London. An additional levy on buyers based abroad is being introduced next month.

“If you are buying a house on a two- to 10-year play, then a lot of overseas buyers will scratch their heads and think why am I paying all this tax, why not just rent?” he said.

Bloomberg
 
Coronavirus: EU says AstraZeneca must 'catch up' on vaccine deliveries

The vaccine producer AstraZeneca must "catch up" on its promised deliveries to the EU before exporting doses elsewhere, the bloc's chief has said.

"The company... has to honour the contract it has with member states," European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said on Thursday.

She spoke after EU leaders held a summit to discuss vaccine supplies.

Meanwhile, French President Emmanuel Macron told reporters it was "the end of naivety" from the EU.

Vaccine rollouts in EU states have started sluggishly, and the bloc has blamed pharmaceutical companies - primarily AstraZeneca - for not delivering promised doses. AstraZeneca has denied that it is failing to honour its contract.

"I think it is clear that first of all the company has to catch up," Mrs von der Leyen told a news conference after the virtual leaders summit.

"[It] has to honour the contract it has with European member states before it can engage again in exporting vaccines," she said. "We want to explain to our European citizens that they [can] get their fair share."

The EU has been criticised, primarily by the UK and the World Health Organization (WHO), for so-called vaccine nationalism after it introduced export controls on jabs produced within the bloc.

In response, UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson warned that "blockades" were not "sensible".

But Mrs von der Leyen hit back on Thursday, arguing that the EU was the "region that exports most vaccines worldwide".

"We invite others to match our openness," she said. The EU chief earlier tweeted that the EU had exported some 77 million doses to 33 countries since December,

Her comments came a day after the EU issued a joint statement with the UK in which both sides pledged to work together after weeks of tensions over the Oxford-AstraZeneca jab.

Source: https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-56529868.
 
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-health-coronavirus-russia-vaccine-let/volunteers-break-rank-to-raise-doubts-in-trial-of-russias-second-covid-19-vaccine-idUSKBN2BI2RJ?il=0

Some of those who volunteered for the clinical trial of Russia’s second COVID-19 vaccine have broken rank and taken part in go-it-alone “citizen experiments” which they say raise concerns about the shot’s efficacy.

A group including 120 former participants in the trial for the EpiVacCorona vaccine, developed by the Vector Institute in Siberia, ran commercially available antibody tests and sent frozen blood plasma samples to independent laboratories with the aim of testing the vaccine’s ability to neutralise an infection.

“We have serious concerns about the efficacy of the peptide vaccine EpiVacCorona,” the group, which is led by businessman Andrey Krynicki, said in an open letter to the health ministry published on their blog on Wednesday.

“The results of our tests diverge from what... officials have said in the media, which is why we are concerned.”

The scientists behind the vaccine, which has been approved by the Russian regulator and added to the national inoculation programme, say it is safe and effective, and question the scientific viability of the group’s findings.

EpiVacCorona, Russia’s second vaccine to be registered, is a synthetic peptide vaccine which uses a different technology from the better-known Sputnik V shot.

Unlike for Sputnik V, whose late-stage, Phase III trial results were published in The Lancet medical journal in February, developers of Russia’s second shot have not yet disclosed larger scale trial results.

Yet more than 115,000 doses have been deployed in the national inoculation programme, according to authorities. Over 5 million doses should be ready by July.

Asked to comment on the letter, the head of the Yekaterinburg branch of the Vector Institute, Alexander Semenov, said scientists were racing to publish Phase III results for EpiVacCorona and they would be ready very soon.

He pointed to results from early-stage, Phase I/II trials, published in an academic journal, in which the vaccine developers said the shot was tested on 100 people and found to be 100% effective in producing antibodies “specific to the antigens that make up the vaccine”.

The open letter’s authors said that the group, whose 19 other members are people who received the vaccine as part of the nationwide inoculation drive, took antibody tests of which 30% were negative. They said the tests used had been recommended to by the vaccine’s developers.

By contrast, Semonov said that average and commonly available testing kits are not specific to EpiVacCorona, and so may not reveal the antibodies it produces. This applies to all peptide-based vaccines globally, he said.

Semonov also said that without proper data on the methods used and or proper scientific analysis, it was impossible to say if the group’s findings were correct.

“The signatories of the open letter to the health ministry must present the protocols of the laboratory experiments that they conducted,” he added. “So far, I have not seen any.”

He said that the vaccine provides protection from COVID-19 only once both shots have been administered, starting from around 45 days after the first dose.

Out of Russia’s population of 145 million, 4.3 million people have now been fully vaccinated against COVID-19, almost all with Sputnik V, including around 1 million in the capital, according to officials.
 
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-health-coronavirus-whitehouse/u-s-to-distribute-11-million-johnson-johnson-covid-19-shots-next-week-white-house-idUSKBN2BI2CF

The U.S. government will distribute 11 million doses of Johnson & Johnson’s COVID-19 vaccine next week in its continued effort to get 200 million shots in people’s arms in the first 100 days of President Joe Biden’s term, the White House said on Friday.

The United States is still on track to deliver on its goal of making shots available to all adults by the end of May, Jeff Zients, the White House’s COVID-19 response coordinator, told reporters.

Vaccine manufacturers Pfizer Inc and Moderna Inc expect to hit their target of supplying 220 million shots between them in the first quarter of 2021, he added.

J&J had said last month it would deliver 20 million doses of its single-dose inoculation in March. However, shipments were delayed because key U.S. manufacturing partners, including Catalent Inc, did not immediately receive U.S. regulatory clearance to send out doses made in their facilities.

The White House is also working to speed up administration of shots by increasing the number of active duty troops assisting with vaccinations, to more than 6,000 from 2,900, Zients said.

As of Friday, 71% of adults aged 65 and over have received at least one vaccine dose, Zients said.

Dr. Rochelle Walensky, head of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said she was deeply concerned about the trajectory of COVID-19 cases in the United States. The country’s seven-day average daily case count is up 7% over last week, to 57,000 daily cases.

“We know from higher surges that if we don’t control things now, there is a real potential for the epidemic curve to soar again,” she said.
 
Coronavirus: France accuses UK of 'blackmail' over vaccine exports

France has accused the UK of "blackmail" over its handling of coronavirus vaccine exports, amid continuing tensions over supply chains.

Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian was asked whether the EU had been "scammed" by sending millions of doses to the UK while its own rollout stuttered.

"We need to build a co-operative relationship," he told France Info radio. "But we cannot deal this way."

France has called for the EU to implement tougher export controls.

Vaccine rollouts have started sluggishly across the bloc, and the EU has blamed pharmaceutical companies - primarily AstraZeneca - for not delivering its promised doses. AstraZeneca has denied that it is failing to honour its contract.

The EU is expecting to receive about 30 million AstraZeneca doses by the end of March, less than a third of what it was hoping for.

The UK's vaccination drive, meanwhile, has so far been more successful than that of the EU's 27 member states.

On Thursday, following a virtual summit where EU leaders discussed vaccine supplies, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said the bloc was the "region that exports most vaccines worldwide" and invited other countries to "match our openness".

She also said AstraZeneca must "catch up" on its deliveries to the EU before exporting doses elsewhere.

Source: https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-56540149.
 
Finished up my second dose of Pfizer vaccine. Aside from shoulder pain no other side effects.

Most US states it is available to all 65 and older and any 65 and younger with health conditions.

General use should open up soon and by the summer we should have heard immunity.

Thanks Trump I guess
 
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Finished up my second dose of Pfizer vaccine. Aside from shoulder pain no other side effects.

Most US states it is available to all 65 and older and any 65 and younger with health conditions.

General use should open up soon and by the summer we should have heard immunity.

Thanks Trump I guess

Yeah everybody is eligible in Texas March 29th onwards. Tried to get it earlier but all places offering it were fully booked. Have 2 people close to me get it so far and no side effects so far aA.
 
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-india-vaccine/serum-institute-delays-expected-launch-of-novavax-vaccine-in-india-idUSKBN2BJ0BI

The launch in India of a new COVID-19 vaccine developed jointly by the Serum Institute of India and U.S.-based biotech firm Novavax is likely to be delayed to September, the Indian company’s boss said on Saturday. Adar Poonawalla, the chief executive of Serum, said in January that the vaccine, named Corovax, was expected to be launched by June.

On Saturday Poonawalla said the trials of Corovax had kicked off in India, but did not say why the vaccine launch was delayed.

“It has been tested against African and UK variants of #COVID19 and has an overall efficacy of 89%,” tweeted Poonawalla, whose Serum Institute is the world’s largest manufacturer of vaccines.

“Hope to launch by September 2021!”

Poonawalla said earlier this month that a temporary U.S. ban on exports of critical raw materials could limit the production of coronavirus vaccines such as Novavax.

India, the world’s biggest vaccine maker, said on Friday it would prioritise domestic COVID-19 inoculations amid rising coronavirus case and had told international buyers of its decision.

The South Asian nation, which has exported 60.5 million does, has not banned exports outright.

India has injected 58.1 million vaccine doses, the third highest figure after the United States and Brazil, although much lower as a proportion of its population of 1.35 billion.

On Saturday former Indian cricket captain Sachin Tendulkar said he had contracted the coronavirus, as the country reported 62,258 new infections in the previous 24 hours, its highest daily rate since October, taking its tally to 11.91 million.

The death toll from the pandemic rose by 291 to stand at 161,240.
 
Yeah everybody is eligible in Texas March 29th onwards. Tried to get it earlier but all places offering it were fully booked. Have 2 people close to me get it so far and no side effects so far aA.

Most middle aged people I know have gotten it already, texas and I guess most of America has a done an excellent job with vaccine delivery. You should sign up with counties instead of trying to book it with a pharmacy, counties will invite you when you come up in their waitlist and you can also sign up for counties that you don't live in and they're moving pretty fast.
 
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-russia-putin-coronavirus-vaccine/putin-felt-minor-side-effects-from-covid-19-vaccine-ifax-idUSKBN2BK0B7?il=0

Russian President Vladimir Putin said on Sunday he had experienced minor side effects from the coronavirus vaccine after receiving the first shot on Tuesday, the Interfax news agency reported, citing a TV interview.

“I woke up the next morning after the vaccination and it seemed to me I felt slight pain in muscles. I took a thermometer... my temperature was normal,” he told the state Rossiya 1 TV channel.

He said he also had an uncomfortable feeling on the site of the injection.

Putin did not reveal which of three Russian vaccines he had taken, saying only the doctor who inoculated him knows that.

The Kremlin announced Putin’s decision to get immunised against the coronavirus in December and the president said the delay was due to a need to combine it with other vaccines he planned to receive.

Putin said that all three Russian vaccines, the most well-known and widely-available of which is Sputnik V, were almost equal.

Nearly two-thirds of Russians are not willing to receive the Sputnik V vaccine, according to independent pollster Levada Center, as of March 1, with most respondents citing side effects as the main reason.

Russia started its vaccination campaign against the coronavirus in December. Last Monday Putin said that 4.3 million out of 144 million Russians had so far got two shots of a vaccine.

Russia has registered over 4.5 million coronavirus infections to date.

Putin said he expected Russia to reach herd immunity and lift pandemic-related restrictions by the end of summer.

Herd immunity refers to a situation where enough people in a population have immunity to an infection to be able to effectively stop the disease from spreading.

With the new coronavirus outbreak, some scientists hope that herd immunity would kick in when between 50% and 70% of a population is immune.
 
Had the AZ on Saturday evening. Woke up with awful muscle aches all over yesterday and felt wiped out. This morning just have a few leg aches left over, but definitely over the worst of the side effects now. 2x paracetamol taken every 4 hours seems to zap most of the symptoms.
 
Have already taken Sinopharm. that ws the only one available here. now ofcourse you can choose between the Russian, Indian and Pfizer/Biontech
 
Pakistan to import CanSino vaccine in bulk, locally package 3m doses: Umar

NCOC chief says bulk vaccines to be procured by mid-April, adds country to receive its first batch of vaccine today

National Command and Operation Centre (NCOC) chief Asad Umar informed on Tuesday that Pakistan will be receiving its first batch of CanSino vaccine for Covid-19 today, adding that the country will be locally packaging three million doses of the vaccine after receiving it in bulk in mid-April.

"First batch of cansino vaccine procured being recieved today. This is the vaccine in which Pakistan participated in phase 3 trials, which was the first time ever that Pakistan had done so for any vaccine," the minister said in a Twitter post.

In another tweet, the minister informed that Pakistan will be receiving the vaccine in bulk by mid-April, from which it will be able to package three million doses.

"The bulk vaccine recieved will be formulated, sterilized and packed in Pakistan," he added.

Umar, who is also the minister for planning and development, further said that special equipment bulk vaccine recieved will be formulated, sterilised and packed in Pakistan.

For this purpose, he maintained, special equipment has been procured and manpower is being trained.

A week ago, on March 23, the minister said that Pakistan would receive its first purchase of over one million doses of Chinese Sinopharm and CanSino Covid-19 vaccines by the end of March.

This, he said, will be the first consignment of Covid-19 vaccines the federal government has purchased from any manufacturer for the 220 million people.

He said the government was in talks with the same companies to purchase a further seven million doses of the vaccines.

“We want them to deliver that seven million by the end of April, but they have not confirmed this yet. They might have some supply issues,” Umar had said.


https://tribune.com.pk/story/2292258/pakistan-to-import-cansino-vaccine-in-bulk-locally-package-3m-doses-umar
 
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/mar/31/merkel-macron-and-putin-sputnik-v-vaccine-eu

Vladimir Putin, Angela Merkel and Emmanuel Macron discussed Russia’s Sputnik V vaccine and its use in Europe on a conference call on Tuesday, the Kremlin said.

Moscow’s statement said that among other subjects the Russian, German and French leaders discussed prospects for the registration of the vaccine in the EU and the possibility of shipments and joint production in EU nations. It did not say who raised the topic.

The EU’s sluggish vaccine rollout has been dogged by an early shortage of doses, but those shortfalls were expected to ease significantly from the beginning of next month with more than 300m doses of Pfizer/BioNTech, Moderna, Johnson & Johnson and AstraZeneca vaccines set to arrive in April, May and June.

The German government confirmed last week it would be open to using Sputnik V if and when it is approved by the European Medicines Agency, with Merkel’s spokesman Steffen Seibert saying an eventual green light from the EMA would make the shot “worth considering for Germany”.

Referring to the Russian vaccine, the chancellor herself said Germany “should use any vaccine that has been approved” by the EMA, while the German health ministry said last week “all vaccines are welcome if they have been approved by the EMA”.

France has been considerably more circumspect, however, with the French foreign minister, Jean-Yves Le Drian, last week accusing both Russia and China of using their vaccines to gain influence and score points abroad.

“In terms of how it is managed, [the Sputnik V vaccine] is more a means of propaganda and aggressive diplomacy than a means of solidarity and health aid,” Le Drian told France Info radio.

Thierry Breton, the French EU commissioner who heads the EU executive’s vaccine taskforce, has also said the bloc has “absolutely no need of Sputnik V” since it “clearly has the capacity to deliver 300 to 350m doses” by the end of June.

The Sputnik V manufacturer responded aggressively, saying in a series of Twitter posts that Breton was “clearly biased” and demanding: “If this is an official position of the EU, please inform us that there is no reason to pursue EMA approval because of your political biases.”

The European regulator launched a rolling review of Sputnik V earlier this month, a step towards it being approved as the first non-western coronavirus jab to be used across the bloc. EU experts are due to visit Russia in April to check the results of clinical trials and inspect the production process.

Russia registered the shot in August before large-scale clinical trials, prompting initial fears about its safety. But reviews since have been largely positive, with The Lancet publishing results showing the vaccine is safe and more than 90% effective.

Russian manufacturers have not so far managed to increase domestic production to meet demand at home and abroad, but the government has said the country aims to produce 178m individual doses of Sputnik V and two other vaccines, EpiVacCorona and CoviVak, by the end of June.

It has also said it hopes to fully vaccinate 30 million Russians by the same date, leaving a possible 118m domestically produced shots available for export. It also has reportedly set up production deals with 10 other countries to produce its vaccines outside Russia.

Russian pharmaceuticals company R-Pharm said last week it expected to begin joint production of Sputnik V shots in its plant in Bavaria, southern Germany, with doses starting to become available from June. Italy, France and Spain have also been named as potential production sites for Sputnik V production within the EU.

The three leaders also discussed the Iranian nuclear standoff and the conflicts in eastern Ukraine, Libya and Syria, the Kremlin said in its readout. It said Putin also responded to questions about the jailed Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny during a “frank and businesslike” discussion.
 
Pfizer vaccine 'safe and 100% effective' in children as young as 12

The two firms have carried out vaccine trials in the US on 12 to 15-year-olds, which they say were successful.

A spokesperson said they will ask the US regulator to approve emergency authorisation of the jab on school pupils next week and hope to roll it out when the new academic year starts in the autumn.

Currently Pfizer jabs are only rolled out to over-16s in the US.

Experts believe vaccinating children of all ages will be critical to stopping the pandemic - and helping schools return to normal after months of disruption.

In a study of 2,260 US volunteers, preliminary data showed there were no cases of COVID-19 among fully vaccinated adolescents compared to 18 among those given a placebo.

In the small study that has not yet been published, researchers reported high levels of virus-fighting antibodies and which were also found to be higher than in studies of young adults.

https://news.sky.com/story/pfizer-vaccine-safe-and-100-effective-in-children-as-young-as-12-12261697
 
Got my first Pfizer shot on Monday. People in my family have gotten both Pfizer and moderna and didn’t feel anything after it. A coworker got the J&J and she’s been fine too.
 
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-health-coronavirus-astrazeneca-johnso/u-s-puts-jj-in-charge-of-plant-that-botched-covid-vaccine-removes-astrazeneca-idUSKBN2BR00Q

The United States has put Johnson and Johnson in charge of a plant that ruined 15 million doses of its COVID-19 vaccine and has stopped British drugmaker AstraZeneca Plc from using the facility, a senior health official said on Saturday.


J&J said it was “assuming full responsibility” of the Emergent BioSolutions facility in Baltimore, reiterating that it will deliver 100 million doses to the government by the end of May.

The Department of Health & Human Services facilitated the move, the health official said in an email, asking not to be named due to the sensitivity of the matter.

AstraZeneca, whose vaccine has not been approved in the United States, said it will work with President Joe Biden’s administration to find an alternative site to produce its vaccine.

White House officials did not immediately respond to a request for comment.


The development, first reported by the New York Times, further hampers AstraZeneca’s efforts in the United States. The government has criticized the drugmaker for using outdated data in the results of its vaccine trial. It later revised its study.

Workers at the Emergent BioSolutions plant several weeks ago conflated ingredients for the J&J and AstraZeneca vaccines, the Times said earlier in the week. J&J said at the time the ruined batch had not advanced to the fill-and-finish stage.

The government’s move to have the facility make only the J&J single-dose vaccine is meant to avoid future mix-ups, the Times said, citing two senior federal health officials.

The top U.S. infectious disease doctor told Reuters on Thursday the country may not need AstraZeneca’s vaccine even if it wins approval.

The United States has loan deals to send Mexico and Canada roughly 4 million doses of the AstraZeneca vaccine, made at its U.S. facility.
 
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-health-coronavirus-australia/australia-doubles-pfizer-vaccine-order-as-astra-clotting-worries-upend-rollout-idUSKBN2BV36E?il=0

Australia has doubled its order of the Pfizer Inc COVID-19 vaccine, Prime Minister Scott Morrison said on Friday, as the country raced to overhaul its inoculation plan over concerns about the risks of blood clots with the AstraZeneca Plc vaccine. Until late Thursday, Australia based its vaccination programme largely on an AstraZeneca shot, with an order for 50 million doses - enough for the required two shots for its entire 25 million population - to be made domestically by biopharma CSL Ltd.

But Australia has now joined a host of countries in restricting use of the vaccine due to clotting concerns. Local health authorities have changed their recommendation to say the country’s nearly 12 million people aged under 50 should take the Pfizer product instead.

As a result Australia has doubled an earlier Pfizer order to 40 million shots, enough for four-fifths of the population, which would be delivered by the end of the year, Morrison said.

The policy change to Pfizer effectively ends plans to have the entire population vaccinated by the end of October.

“It is not a prohibition on the AstraZeneca vaccine,” Morrison told reporters in Canberra after a national cabinet meeting to discuss the virus response.

“For those who are over 50, there is a strong encouragement to be taking this AstraZeneca vaccine.”

After Australia opened a quarantine-free travel zone with neighbouring New Zealand, Morrison said he hoped to make similar arrangements elsewhere in the region, and “the more Australians who are vaccinated, the more likelihood there is of being able to have the types of arrangements that I mentioned”.

Health Secretary Brendan Murphy called the policy change “highly precautionary” given the low rates of possible adverse effects associated with the AstraZeneca shot. More than a dozen countries have at one time suspended use of the AstraZeneca vaccine, but most have resumed, with some, including France, the Netherlands and Germany, recommending a minimum age.

Australia’s most populous state New South Wales, home to nearly a third of the population, said it was pausing the AstraZeneca rollout to update “informed consent” documents to notify patients of risks.

Before the updated Pfizer order was announced, AstraZeneca said it respected the Australian decision and was working with regulators around the world “to understand the individual cases, epidemiology and possible mechanisms that could explain these extremely rare events”.

CSL said it remained committed to meeting its contracted arrangements to make the vaccine. As well as the AstraZeneca and Pfizer contracts, Australia ordered 51 million doses of a vaccine being trialled by U.S. pharmaceutical giant Novavax Inc, but local authorities say they do not expect to approve the product until late 2021.

Australia also embarked on a home-grown option - as opposed to local manufacture of AstraZeneca’s offshore-developed product - with University of Queensland undertaking a trial of its own vaccine. That trial was aborted in December when the product was linked to false positives in HIV tests.

The government said in January that it planned to have four million vaccinated by the end of March, only to have 600,000 by that time. The number was just over one million as of Friday, the authorities said. “Australians won’t forget who is responsible for failing to deliver on what are his own promises and his own commitments,” opposition Labor leader Anthony Albanese told reporters on Friday.

“They should have listened to the expert advice that was given to the government, and indeed to all governments, about not placing all our eggs in one basket”.

New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said the country was still assessing the AstraZeneca vaccine, without specifying whether the Australian decision would affect it.

The Pfizer vaccine is the only inoculation approved by New Zealand, which says it has ordered enough for its five million population.

Australia began vaccinations later than some other countries because of its low number of infections, which stand at just under 29,400, with 909 deaths, since the pandemic began.
 
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/apr/09/johnson-and-johnson-one-shot-vaccine-delivery

US deliveries of the “one-shot” Johnson and Johnson vaccine are set to drop by 85% next week, in a setback to the government’s vaccination campaign. The Biden administration has allocated just 700,000 J&J doses to states for the week beginning April 12, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, a huge drop from the nearly 5m shots allocated the week before.

The decline comes after J&J reported a batch of its Covid-19 vaccines developed in Baltimore had failed quality standards and can’t be used – as Anthony Fauci warned the US is at risk from a new coronavirus surge.

Distribution of the J&J vaccine – which requires just one dose, as opposed to the two-shot Moderna and Pfizer vaccines also authorized for use in the US – has been uneven since it was introduced.

The government allocated 2.8m doses to states at the beginning of March, only for that to drop to 493,000 the next week, but the drop to April 12 is the steepest yet.

The slowdown comes after workers at the plant manufacturing coronavirus shots for J&J and AstraZeneca accidentally conflated the vaccines’ ingredients several weeks ago, the New York Times reported.

It is unclear if the mix-up is the reason for the drop in J&J doses, and a J&J spokesman told the Wall Street Journal that the company still aimed to deliver 100m doses to the US by the middle of year, most of those by the end of May. The federal government has a deal with J&J for 200 million doses.

On Thursday Fauci, the top infectious diseases expert in the US, told CNN coronavirus cases had plateaued at a “disturbingly high level”. More than 61,000 new cases were reported on Wednesday, according to Johns Hopkins University.

“It’s almost a race between getting people vaccinated and this surge that seems to want to increase,” Fauci said.

Health experts have warned the rising number of coronavirus cases in dozens of US states is probably attributable to the spread of virus variants. Michigan has recorded the worst increase in infections over the past two weeks, at a rate not seen since early December.

On Tuesday, the Associated Press reported that nearly half of new US virus infections are in just five states, with New York, Michigan, Florida, Pennsylvania and New Jersey responsible for nearly 197,500 new cases in the latest available seven-day period.

Despite Michigan’s rate of new infections in the past two weeks, Gretchen Whitmer, the states Democratic governor, has stopped short of ordering restrictions, instead asking for voluntary compliance. She has blamed the virus surge on pandemic fatigue, which has people moving about more, as well as more contagious variants.

This week, Joe Biden said half of all American adults are on track to have received at least one Covid-19 vaccination by this weekend. The president has set a goal of delivering 200m vaccinations by April 30 – which marks his first 100 days in office.

One in four American adults has now been fully vaccinated against the virus, according to the CDC.
 
Johnson will start bridging trials in India. Biological E an Indian company will manufacture and sell 1bn doses.
 
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-health-coronavirus-eu-pfizer/eu-seeks-new-contract-with-pfizer-biontech-for-up-to-1-8-billion-vaccines-from-2022-eu-source-idUSKBN2BW1VV?il=0

The European Commission is seeking EU governments’ approval to launch talks with Pfizer and BioNTech for the purchase of up to 1.8 billion doses of their COVID-19 vaccines to be delivered in 2022 and 2023, an EU official told Reuters.

Earlier on Friday, German daily Die Welt reported that the Commission was shortly to sign contracts to buy up to 1.8 billion doses, but did not say with which company.

The EU official, who asked not to be named because the matter is confidential, said the EU executive had already decided to approach Pfizer-BioNTech and that EU governments backed the plan, though there was not yet a definitive approval.

A Commission spokesman confirmed plans to buy the additional doses, of which half would be optional.

He also confirmed that the EU executive had already identified one supplier, a manufacturer of mRNA vaccines, but declined to comment on which company would be approached to negotiate the contract.

“If provided the opportunity Pfizer and BioNTech are prepared to supply Europe with hundreds of millions of doses of COVID vaccines in 2022 and 2023 produced in our manufacturing facilities in Europe,” a Pfizer spokesman said.

The two companies have the capacity to produce more than 3 billion doses of vaccine in 2022, he added.

Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna are already supplying the EU with mRNA vaccines and German biotech firm CureVac is seeking EU approval for its mRNA shot.

The vaccines would be delivered under monthly timetables and with clauses obliging the supplier to deliver, the EU official said.
 
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-health-coronavirus-israel-study/south-african-variant-can-break-through-pfizer-vaccine-israeli-study-says-idUSKBN2BX0JZ?il=0

The coronavirus variant discovered in South Africa can “break through” Pfizer/BioNTech’s COVID-19 vaccine to some extent, a real-world data study in Israel found, though its prevalence in the country is low and the research has not been peer reviewed. The study, released on Saturday, compared almost 400 people who had tested positive for COVID-19, 14 days or more after they received one or two doses of the vaccine, against the same number of unvaccinated patients with the disease. It matched age and gender, among other characteristics.

The South African variant, B.1.351, was found to make up about 1% of all the COVID-19 cases across all the people studied, according to the study by Tel Aviv University and Israel’s largest healthcare provider, Clalit.

But among patients who had received two doses of the vaccine, the variant’s prevalence rate was eight times higher than those unvaccinated - 5.4% versus 0.7%.

This suggests the vaccine is less effective against the South African variant, compared with the original coronavirus and a variant first identified in Britain that has come to comprise nearly all COVID-19 cases in Israel, the researchers said.

“We found a disproportionately higher rate of the South African variant among people vaccinated with a second dose, compared to the unvaccinated group. This means that the South African variant is able, to some extent, to break through the vaccine’s protection,” said Tel Aviv University’s Adi Stern.

The researchers cautioned, though, that the study only had a small sample size of people infected with the South African variant because of its rarity in Israel.

They also said the research was not intended to deduce overall vaccine effectiveness against any variant, since it only looked at people who had already tested positive for COVID-19, not at overall infection rates.

Pfizer and BioNTech could not be immediately reached for comment outside business hours. The companies said on April 1 that their vaccine was around 91% effective at preventing COVID-19, citing updated trial data that included participants inoculated for up to six months.

In respect to the South African variant, they said that among a group of 800 study volunteers in South Africa, where B.1.351 is widespread, there were nine cases of COVID-19, all of which occurred among participants who got the placebo. Of those nine cases, six were among individuals infected with the South African variant.

Some previous studies have indicated that the Pfizer/BioNTech shot was less potent against the B.1.351 variant than against other variants of the coronavirus, but still offered a robust defence.

While the results of the study may cause concern, the low prevalence of the South African strain was encouraging, according to Stern.

“Even if the South African variant does break through the vaccine’s protection, it has not spread widely through the population,” said Stern, adding that the British variant may be “blocking” the spread of the South African strain.

Almost 53% of Israel’s 9.3 million population has received both Pfizer doses. Israel has largely reopened its economy in recent weeks while the pandemic appears to be receding, with infection rates, severe illness and hospitalizations dropping sharply. About a third of Israelis are below the age of 16, which means they are still not eligible for the shot.
 
U.S. calls for pause to J&J COVID-19 vaccine over rare blood clots

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-health-coronavirus-johnson-johnson-va/u-s-calls-for-pause-to-jj-covid-19-vaccine-over-rare-blood-clots-idUSKBN2C01BC

U.S. federal health agencies on Tuesday recommended pausing the use of Johnson & Johnson’s COVID-19 vaccine after six recipients developed a rare disorder involving blood clots, in a fresh setback to global efforts to tackle the pandemic. The move comes a week after European regulators said they had found a possible link between AstraZeneca’s COVID-19 vaccine and a rare blood clotting problem that had led to a small number of deaths.

Johnson & Johnson’s (J&J) single dose vaccine - most COVID-19 shots are delivered over two doses - and AstraZeneca’s low-cost vaccine are seen as vital tools in the fight against a pandemic that has claimed more than three million lives.

An advisory committee to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) will hold a meeting on Wednesday to review the cases linked to the J&J vaccine, and the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) will review the analysis, the agencies said in a joint statement.

All six recipients were women between the ages of 18 and 48, and the symptoms occurred six to 13 days after vaccination.

In the cases, a type of blood clot called cerebral venous sinus thrombosis (CVST) was seen in combination with low levels of blood platelets (thrombocytopenia).

The CDC and FDA said the adverse events appeared to be extremely rare.

J&J said it was working closely with regulators and noted no clear causal relationship had been established between the events and the COVID-19 vaccine made by its Janssen unit.

One woman died and a second in Nebraska has been hospitalized in critical condition, the New York Times reported, citing officials. As of April 12, more than 6.8 million doses of the J&J vaccine had been administered in the United States.

J&J’s shares were down 3% before the opening bell.

The U.S. move comes less than a week after Europe’s drugs regulator said it was reviewing rare blood clots in four people in the United States who had received the shot.

European officials have said J&J began delivering its COVID-19 vaccine to EU countries on Monday and had committed to delivering 55 million doses to the bloc by the end of June and another 120 million in the third quarter.

Europe’s drugs regulator continues to recommend the use of AstraZeneca’s COVID-19 vaccine, saying the benefits outweigh the risks. Several EU countries, however, have limited its use to certain age groups.

Australia has no current plans to add J&J’s coronavirus vaccine to its immunization drive, authorities said on Tuesday, as it moves away from procuring vaccines under review for potential links to blood clots.
 
Novavax says supply shortages delaying full-speed production of its COVID-19 vaccine

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-health-coronavirus-novavax/novavax-says-supply-shortages-delaying-full-speed-production-of-its-covid-19-vaccine-idUSKBN2C013Z

Novavax Inc has pushed back the timeline for hitting its production target of 150 million COVID-19 vaccine doses per month until the third quarter due to supply shortages including bags used to grow cells, a company spokeswoman told Reuters. Novavax executives had previously said full-scale vaccine production could be achieved by mid-year. The company told Reuters in January it expected to reach full production capacity by May or June.

“We said during our earnings call that we expect all capacity being online by around mid-year. We’re continuing to refine that timing as we get closer, which now leads us to think we’re online/at full capacity by Q3,” Novavax communications director Amy Speak said by email on Monday.

“There are some supply shortages that come and go that have contributed to the revision in timing,” she added. “These have included things like the bioreactor bags and filters.”

Novavax could receive UK regulatory authorization for its vaccine as early as this month after releasing impressive UK trial data. It anticipates clearance in the United States could come as early as May after soon-to-be released data from its U.S. vaccine trial are reviewed by regulators.

The Maryland-based company is one of several COVID-19 vaccine makers that have had to push back production timelines due to industrywide shortages of raw materials and difficulties getting plants up and running.

Reuters reported last month that Novavax had delayed a planned deal to ship at least 100 million doses of its two-shot vaccine to the European Union, in part because of supply challenges.

In a Saturday interview with the Guardian, Novavax Chief Executive Stan Erck said the company has faced difficulties sourcing key production materials including single-use bags used to grow vaccine cells.

“Single-use bags are facing critical shortages and delays,” said Mark Womack, chief business officer of AGC Biologics, a contract manufacturer that is producing materials used in Novavax’s vaccine.

Data released in March from the UK trial showed the vaccine to be highly effective against the original strain of the novel coronavirus as well as the more contagious and deadly variant first discovered in Britain and now rampant in Europe and the United States. The data also suggests the shot provides some protection against a highly concerning variant that emerged in South Africa, which some drugmakers have said may require a booster shot to address.
 
Covid-19: US agencies call for pause in Johnson & Johnson vaccine

US health authorities are calling for a pause in the use of the Johnson & Johnson Covid-19 vaccine, after reports of extremely rare blood clotting cases.

The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) said six cases in 6.8 million doses had been reported and it was acting "out of an abundance of caution".

Johnson & Johnson said it was also delaying vaccine rollout in Europe.

The US move follows similar rare cases in the AstraZeneca vaccine, which has prompted some curbs in its use.

The US has by far the most confirmed cases of Covid-19 - more than 31 million - with more than 562,000 deaths, another world high.

The picture for the virus in the US is complicated, though, with some areas in the north seeing surges in infections, the south less, and with the figures not always reflecting inoculation numbers.

The Johnson & Johnson jab was approved in the US on 27 February and its use has been more limited so far than that of the Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna doses.

Nevertheless, the government had hoped for hundreds of thousands of vaccinations of the jab every week as it is single-shot and its storage at common refrigerator temperatures makes it easier to distribute.

What is the recommendation?
In a joint statement, the FDA and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) said they were "reviewing data involving six reported US cases of a rare and severe type of blood clot in individuals after receiving the J&J vaccine".

It said the clotting was called cerebral venous sinus thrombosis (CVST).

The statement said that this type of blood clot needed a different treatment than usual.

The common treatment - an anticoagulant drug called heparin - "may be dangerous", it said.

Pending a further review, the FDA and CDC recommended "a pause in the use of this vaccine out of an abundance of caution".

This was to "ensure that the health care provider community is aware of the potential for these adverse events".

All six cases were in women aged between 18 and 48, with symptoms six to 13 days after vaccination.

The New York Times quoted officials as saying one woman had died and a second, in Nebraska, was in a critical condition.

The joint statement said that "people who have received the J&J vaccine who develop severe headache, abdominal pain, leg pain, or shortness of breath within three weeks after vaccination should contact their health care provider".

The federal government is now likely to pause the use of the vaccine in all federally run vaccination sites, and to expect state sites to do the same.

Johnson & Johnson statement
Johnson & Johnson, a US health care company, issued a statement saying that safety was its "number one priority" and that it shared "all adverse event reports" with the health authorities.

It added: "We are aware that thromboembolic events including those with thrombocytopenia have been reported with Covid-19 vaccines. At present, no clear causal relationship has been established between these rare events and the Janssen (J&J) Covid-19 vaccine."

It also said that it had been reviewing cases with European health authorities.

"We have made the decision to proactively delay the rollout of our vaccine in Europe," it said.

The US health protection agency has identified a very small number of the same rare form of blood clots seen in people given the AstraZeneca jab.

Governments around the world have cautiously begun to link these rare blood clotting incidents to the vaccine because of their unusual presentation - though this link hasn't been definitively proven.

People suffering them had very low platelet counts - blood cells that normally help repair damage in the body.

The Johnson & Johnson vaccine works in a very similar way to the AstraZeneca one, so in some ways it's not surprising they may cause similar side effects. And they appear to be comparably rare.

The numbers we're talking about are so low that it's difficult to say confidently what the risk of fatal blood clots is, but for the AstraZeneca jab it has been estimated at one-in-a-million. There have been six cases out of 6.8 million doses of the Johnson & Johnson jab.

In contrast, Covid kills one in 1,000 infected in their 40s among those who develop symptoms (and this risk is much higher among older people).

Once you get into the youngest age groups, who are less likely to die from Covid, that risk calculus shifts, particularly when there aren't too many infections in circulation.


AstraZeneca vaccinations
The Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine, which has been given safely to tens of millions of people, has also seen some extremely rare blood clotting cases.

The reports led some nations to suspend its use but most have now resumed, although in a number of cases with a recommended minimum age, for example 60 and over in Germany.

In the UK, authorities advised that those under 30 should be offered an alternative.

The delay in rolling out Johnson & Johnson in Europe, along with production and supply problems for AstraZeneca, could mean worsening problems for the European vaccination drive.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-56733715
 
U.S. advisory panel to review rare clot risk with J&J COVID-19 vaccine after its use was paused

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-health-coronavirus-johnson-johnson-cd/u-s-advisory-panel-to-review-rare-clot-risk-with-jj-covid-19-vaccine-after-its-use-was-paused-idUSKBN2C11LC

A U.S. health advisory panel on Wednesday will review six reported cases of rare blood clots in women who received Johnson & Johnson’s COVID-19 vaccine a day after federal regulators paused its use to assess the issue. The cases, all in women under age 50, were reported out of 7.2 million U.S. doses of the J&J vaccine administered - a risk federal officials and immunology experts said was extremely low when weighed against the heavy toll of the novel coronavirus.

One of the six women died. So far, more than 562,362 people in the United States have died from COVID-19.

Top U.S. health officials, meanwhile, at a separate briefing on Wednesday urged Americans to keep their vaccination appointments as other authorized vaccines fill the void.

J&J’s single-dose shot has been far less widely used in the United States as it has faced manufacturing setbacks and received emergency authorization later than the two-dose shots from Moderna Inc and Pfizer Inc with partner BioNTech SE. About 185 million doses of those have been administered in the United States so far.

However, J&J’s vaccine has been seen as a critical option to expand protections to harder-to-reach populations.

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s immunization panel will review the clotting cases and make recommendations when it convenes at 1:30 p.m. (1730 GMT). The Food and Drug Administration will then analyze the recommendations and determine the next steps.

Biden administration officials have said they do not expect the pause in use of J&J’s vaccine to hamper its fight against the pandemic, citing enough doses of the other two to stay on track. The FDA said the halt should only last a few days and was needed to help physicians understand how to recognize and treat the issue as a standard treatment for clotting could cause serious complications or death.

Dr. Anthony Fauci, President Joe Biden’s chief medical adviser, on Wednesday told CNN the pause in administering the J&J shot would allow regulators to see if there were other possible clot events, but that he did not think there would be many more such cases.

The pause “very well may be quite temporary,” he said separately on MSNBC. Following the CDC review, the FDA could decide to resume use of J&J’s vaccine, allow its use with some changes, or decide against its continued use, he said.

Fauci said it was up to the regulatory agency but that “very likely, they’ll say we looked at it, and now we will go back, maybe make some modifications.”

J&J has said no clear causal relationship has been established between the clots and its vaccine, but that it was working closely with regulators in the United States and Europe, where it also voluntarily paused its rollout. Similar rare brain blood clots have been reported with AstraZeneca’s vaccine in Europe, where it was decided the shot’s benefits outweigh the clotting risk.

J&J shares were near flat in midday trading on Wednesday, after closing down 1.3% on Tuesday.

Some health experts worry the pause may raise public doubts about U.S. vaccination efforts, though Fauci and other top U.S. health officials have said it should give people confidence that regulators take safety seriously.

“These pauses are actually common when new vaccines and drugs are rolled out. We’re just doing the due diligence to make sure everything is safe so we can continue with our vaccination efforts,” U.S. Surgeon General Vivek Murthy said on the “CBS This Morning” program.
 
Only 6 cases out of 7 million vaccine injected , makes J&J one of the safest vaccine . Did not make any sense to stop it even for a day, overreaction . I'm sure they will resume giving it within a week. I would have no problem taking it .
 
ISLAMABAD: The National Institute of Health (NIH) is working on a plan to develop a single-dose coronavirus vaccine for Pakistan.

"Our team is ready to undertake this task, while a Chinese team is already here to oversee the exercise," NIH Executive Director Major General Aamer Ikram told the National Assembly standing committee on national health services on Thursday.

He said the NIH had carried out a clinical trial of Chinese COVID-19 vaccine CanSinoBio, placing the country among the first few to do so.

China had been formally asked to transfer the vaccine technology and raw material for the vaccine will reach the country shortly, the NIH official said.

The process of manufacturing the COVID-19 vaccine will begin following the imminent restoration of the relevant NIH plant, which was closed a few years ago.

https://www.geo.tv/latest/345602-nih-planning-to-develop-single-dose-coronavirus-vaccine-in-pakistan
 
Does anyone know what vaccine is currently being given in karachi and is it considered safe? My mom is scheduled to get one soon.
 
https://www.reuters.com/world/us/dr-fauci-expects-decision-jj-vaccine-soon-friday-2021-04-18/

Dr. Anthony Fauci on Sunday predicted that U.S. health regulators will end the temporary pause on distributing Johnson & Johnson's COVID-19 vaccine, adding he expects a decision could come as soon as Friday.

"My estimate is that we will continue to use it in some form. I doubt very seriously if they just cancel it. I don't think that's going to happen. I do think that there will likely be some sort of warning or restriction or risk assessment," Fauci said on NBC's "Meet the Press."

U.S. health regulators recommended last week that use of the J&J vaccine be paused after reports of six cases of rare brain blood clots in women, out of some 7 million people who have received the shot in the United States.

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) advisory panel is set to meet on April 23 to discuss the next steps for the vaccine.

Fauci said he does not know what the final decision will be, but he predicts there will be a resumption.

"I don't know if there have been further cases. We will know that by Friday, and I would be very surprised ... if we don't have a resumption in some form by Friday. A decision almost certainly will be made by Friday," Fauci said on CBS' "Face the Nation."

Fauci on Sunday also laid out a possible timeline for when children could be vaccinated against COVID-19.

"I would be surprised if we didn't have the high school kids being able to be vaccinated by the fall term," he told CBS. "I think by the time we get to the first quarter of 2022, we will be able to vaccinate children of virtually any age - hopefully before then," he added.

"But I think that's going to be the latest we'll see it."
 
https://www.reuters.com/business/healthcare-pharmaceuticals/eu-regulator-finds-possible-link-between-jj-covid-19-vaccine-blood-clots-2021-04-20/

Europe's drug regulator has found a possible link between Johnson & Johnson's COVID-19 vaccine and rare blood clotting issues in adults who received doses in the United States, but backed its overall benefits against any risks.

The European Medicines Agency (EMA) said on Tuesday its safety committee had concluded that a warning about unusual blood clots with low platelets must be added to the vaccine's labels, just as it has also required of rival vaccine maker AstraZeneca.

The review of the cases prompted a pause in the rollout of the vaccine in Europe and the United States last week, the latest blow to efforts to tackle the pandemic, which has killed more than 3.1 million and infected 142.1 million worldwide.

Several nations have suspended or limited the use of AstraZeneca's vaccine over possible blood clots. The EMA examined eight cases of clotting that occurred in U.S. adults under 60 years, mostly women, within three weeks of vaccination with J&J's single shot.

The EMA's review has led to the conclusion that "these blood clots and disorders are very rare side effects of the vaccine," Sabine Straus, chair of EMA's safety committee, said in a briefing.

If treated early, health care professionals can help people in their recovery and avoid further complications, she said.

With both the AstraZeneca and J&J vaccines, the reports involve extremely rare clotting, mainly a type of blood clot called cerebral venous sinus thrombosis (CVST), that was seen in combination with low levels of blood platelets, called thrombocytopenia.

J&J has said it is working closely with regulators and noted that no clear causal relationship had been established between the clotting cases and its shot.

The EU watchdog also said that most clots had occurred in the brain and abdomen, as was the case with AstraZeneca's (AZN.L) shot, Vaxzevria, which is also being studied for similar blood clotting problems.

"One plausible explanation for the combination of blood clots and low blood platelets is an immune response, leading to a condition similar to one seen sometimes in patients treated with heparin," the EMA said.

The U.S. health regulator last week recommended pausing the use of the J&J single-dose shot after six women under the age of 50 developed blood clots after receiving it.

The cases were reported out of more than 7 million doses administered in the United States as of April 13, the EMA said.

U.S. authorities will meet on Friday to discuss whether to resume using the vaccine. read more

J&J, which recorded $100 million in COVID-19 vaccine sales, has delayed rolling out the vaccine to Europe, but said on Tuesday it was prepared to resume the deployment. It has said it would aim to deliver 55 million doses to the EU, as contracted, by the end of June. read more

J&J's vaccine, developed by its Janssen unit, is one of four COVID-19 vaccines authorised for use in Europe.
 
Border officials are forced to take travellers' COVID test paperwork at "face value" and just accept results are negative - because they are often written in a foreign language, it has been revealed.

Lucy Moreton, professional officer for the Immigration Services Union (ISU), said travellers' documents in anything other than English often simply had to be "taken on trust".

She said officers did spot around 100 fake COVID-19 certificates a day, but that there was no way of knowing how many more evaded detection.

And in her evidence to the All-Party Parliamentary Group (APPG) on Coronavirus she also warned there was "little to no evidence" on how well incoming travellers to the UK were complying with quarantine.

When asked by Lord Strasburger how border officials were able to verify proof of a negative test, Ms Moreton replied: "We are not, is the simple answer. It's predominantly taken on trust."

She said the 100 or so fakes a day that they do spot are largely because there is an obvious spelling error in the English ones.

She added: "They have to be in one of four languages - so if it's in English and there's a spelling error, you have an outside chance of spotting it.

"If you happen to speak one of the other specified languages and you can spot a spelling error, then you might see that as well.

"Otherwise they're taken on face value - do you have that piece of paper or email or something on your phone that broadly suggests you might have taken a test?

"There are a series of code numbers which defines exactly what type of test that is, and the border force has a list that they can check it against, but these things are very easy to knock up electronically, unfortunately."

And when quizzed about if there were 100 fakes spotted a day, how many more were slipping through the net, Ms Moreton said: "It's inherently unknowable - we don't know what it is we don't know."

She added: "A lot of the border, immigration, migration, and quarantine controls are based on trust.

"We trust people when they say they've not been in a red list country in the last 10 days. We trust people when they say they're going to 2 Acacia Avenue to quarantine.

"The whole thing is all based on an assumption that people will do the right thing. But I'm not sure that the behavioural studies indicate that they do."

She explained the process for checking incoming people consisted of firstly the usual immigration check, and secondly, all the various COVID paperwork checks.

"Do they have the 72 hour pre-departure COVID test? Have they completed the passenger locator form correctly and in full?

"Have they booked the two tests they are required to - day two and day eight? If they are staying at a hotel, or supposed to be, have they booked that?

"So that's quite a lot of separate pieces of paper that are not combined, so a lot of separate tests."

The need for border checks has been heightened recently, due to increasing numbers of new coronavirus variants, such as the ones first identified in South Africa and India.

On Monday, India was placed on the "red list" of countries from which incoming travellers are no longer allowed to enter the UK.

The so-called India variant is known as a double mutant as it has two new significant mutations in the spike protein of the virus that help it infect cells and evade the immune system.

According to figures from the COVID-19 Genomics UK Consortium (COG-UK), which tracks COVID variants, 182 cases of the India variant have so far been found in the UK up to 16 April.

Layla Moran MP, chair of the APPG on Coronavirus, said there was "stark evidence" current border checks were "totally inadequate to stop COVID cases entering the UK".

She added: "The government must act now to stop our airports becoming breeding grounds for the virus.

"That means reducing overcrowding in arrival halls, effectively separating passengers arriving from red list countries and carrying out thorough checks to root out fake documentation and ensure people comply with the rules."

The APPG on Coronavirus is carrying out an ongoing cross-party inquiry into the government's handling of the coronavirus pandemic, and will be using evidence given at its latest session to make follow-up recommendations on border policy and international travel, after first recommending securing the UK's borders in August last year.

Ms Moreton also voiced concerns to the APPG about quarantine checks.

"There is little to no evidence on how well they are complying with quarantine or managed quarantine," she said.

"Evidence to previous groups and to the Home Affairs Select Committee has suggested that less than 1% of those who are required to isolate at home are checked."

SKY
 
https://www.reuters.com/world/europe/germany-distribute-jj-covid-vaccine-federal-states-2021-04-21/

European countries prepared on Wednesday to resume deliveries of Johnson & Johnson’s COVID-19 vaccine and speed up the rollout after Europe’s drug regulator backed the shot.

Germany's health ministry said it would start deliveries to federal states for use in vaccination centres shortly, and that family doctors should receive the vaccine from week after next.

The European Medicines Agency (EMA) said on Tuesday that it had found a possible link between J&J’s vaccine and rare blood clotting issues in adults who received doses in the United States, but it said that benefits of the one-dose shot outweigh its risks.

The review of a handful of cases prompted a pause in the rollout of the J&J vaccine in Europe and the United States last week, the latest setback to efforts to tackle the pandemic, which has killed more than 3.1 million and infected 142.1 million worldwide.

While the EMA said it considers the vaccine safe, it has left it up to the European Union's member states to decide how to use it, taking a similar stance to that with rival AstraZeneca's shot.

The Netherlands plans to resume the use of the vaccine as of Wednesday. Italy's health ministry recommended that the J&J vaccine be used for people over the age of 60.

In Germany, it was not immediately clear whether regulators would limit the use of J&J's vaccine to a certain age group, as it had done with the vaccine by AstraZeneca, which its vaccine committee recommends for ages 60 and over. The committee, known as STIKO, is due to meet on Thursday.

Denmark's health authority expects to announce its decision next week on how to proceed, pending further investigations into the vaccine's possible link to rare blood clots.

Use of the J&J vaccine was temporarily halted by U.S. regulators last week after rare brain blood clots combined with a low blood platelet count were reported in six women, prompting the company to delay its rollout in Europe. Nearly 8 million people in the United States have received the J&J vaccine.

J&J has said it is working closely with regulators and noted that no clear causal relationship had been established between the clotting cases and its shot.
 
U.S. officials hopeful as advisers meet again on J&J COVID-19 vaccine

https://www.reuters.com/business/healthcare-pharmaceuticals/jj-covid-19-vaccine-pause-reviewed-us-officials-hope-resume-shots-2021-04-23/

Advisers to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention will meet again on Friday to consider whether it is safe to resume injections of Johnson & Johnson’s COVID-19 vaccine, as senior U.S. health officials prepare for a green light.

The panel last week called for more data about a possible link to rare blood clots in the brain before deciding how and whether to end a "pause" in administration of J&J vaccines called for by the CDC and the Food and Drug Administration.

The decision by CDC's advisory panel has global implications since J&J's immunization is seen as an important tool for poorer countries and less accessible populations, given that it only requires one dose and can be stored at normal refrigerator temperatures, making it relatively easy to transport.

Some panel members argued an extension of the pause could signal to the world that the vaccine had major safety issues. There have been six reported cases of rare brain blood clots accompanied by low platelets in the blood out of nearly 8 million doses administered in the United States. U.S. officials last week said a handful more possible cases were under review.

State health officials on Thursday said the CDC was investigating two more possible cases, probing the death of an Oregon woman in her 50s and the hospitalization a Texas woman with symptoms similar to those found in the clot cases - both of whom had received J&J's shot. Officials have not linked the cases to the vaccine.

The United States has ordered enough doses of vaccines from Pfizer Inc /BioNTech and Moderna Inc to cover all U.S. adults, but many senior regulators, including U.S. infectious disease chief Anthony Fauci, have signaled they hope to resume use of the J&J vaccine.

CDC Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky said she was hopeful for a quick decision on J&J's vaccine, especially as EU regulators backed the shot this week, and added U.S. advisers on Friday would review data as well as the agency's risk/benefit analysis.

"I will look toward their guidance. I believe its really important to make a swift decision," she told NBC News' "Today" program on Thursday, adding that she expected U.S. guidance to be issued soon after Friday's meeting.

The European Medicines Agency on Tuesday recommended adding a warning about unusual blood clots with low blood platelet counts to the vaccine's product label, saying that benefits of the shot outweighed the risks. The drugmaker has said it would resume rolling in the region.

U.S. National Institutes of Health Director Dr. Francis Collins told ABC News' "Good Morning America" program on Friday the Europeans' decision to move ahead while adding a warning was "encouraging."

He added possible clots are "one in a million kind of risk" while "this vaccine can save lives" in the fight against a pandemic, which has already claimed more than 3.2 million lives globally, including at least 570,674 in the United States. read more

J&J has faced several setbacks since its shot gained U.S. emergency authorization in February, first drawing scrutiny over its halting process to scale up production of the vaccine, and then over rare cases of clots in a handful of vaccine recipients. FDA inspectors this week cited serious cleanliness and medical safety issues at an Emergent BioSolutions plant making the J&J vaccine.

The company's shares were near flat in early morning pre-trade on Friday ahead of the meeting.

European regulators said the blood clots in patients who received the J&J vaccine bear close resemblance to 169 cases in Europe reported with the AstraZeneca Plc vaccine.

U.S. officials said a key reason for their pause was to communicate the risk to doctors on how to recognize the side effects and treat them, saying patients with clot-related symptoms following the J&J vaccine should not be given heparin, a blood thinner widely used to treat clotting disorders.

"This is a treatable condition if you recognize it right away," Collins told ABC.
 
https://www.reuters.com/business/healthcare-pharmaceuticals/jj-covid-19-vaccine-pause-reviewed-us-officials-hope-resume-shots-2021-04-23/

The United States can immediately resume use of Johnson & Johnson’s COVID-19 vaccine, top health regulators said on Friday, ending a 10-day pause to investigate its link to extremely rare but potentially deadly blood clots.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and Food and Drug Administration said the risks of experiencing the syndrome involving severe blood clots and low platelets as a result of the vaccine was very low. They found 15 cases in the 8 million shots given.

"We are no longer recommending a pause in the use of this vaccine," CDC Director Rochelle Walensky told a news briefing. "Based on the in-depth analysis, there is likely an association but the risk is very low."

Top U.S. FDA officials said the decision was effective immediately, clearing the way for shots in arms as early as Saturday. The agency said it would warn of the risk in an updated fact sheet given to vaccine recipients and providers.

The agencies made the decision following a meeting of outside advisers to the CDC who recommended that the vaccine pause be ended.

In an analysis presented at the meeting, CDC staff said that the cases of the syndrome that they had found occurred at a rate of seven per one million doses in women under age 50, with the highest risk occurring among women ages 30 to 39.

For women over age 50 and for all men, the clots appeared at a rate of one per one million doses, the analysis showed. In all, there were three deaths, officials said.

After a day-long meeting, the CDC panel voted 10-4 that the J&J vaccine be used as recommended in people 18 years of age and older, the parameters of its current FDA authorization.

Dr. Jesse Goodman, an infectious disease expert at Georgetown University in Washington and a former chief scientist at the FDA, said the risk was not trivial, but still small.

"But we should keep it in perspective. I mean the risk of dying from a car accident in your life is something like one in 100, the risk of being struck by lightning is something like one in 15,000," Goodman said.

Unlike the highly effective vaccines by Pfizer Inc and Moderna Inc, which require two doses and must be kept frozen at ultra-cold temperatures, J&J's vaccine can be given in a single dose and stored at regular refrigeration temperatures, making it a better option for hard-to-reach areas.

"We will collaborate with health authorities around the world to educate healthcare professionals and the public to ensure this very rare event can be identified early and treated effectively," J&J's Chief Scientific Officer Paul Stoffels said in a statement after the agencies made their announcement.

When the agencies first announced the pause, they urged doctors to avoid using the blood thinner heparin, commonly given to patients to break up blood clots, in people who had received the J&J vaccine and were experiencing blood clots and low blood platelets.

In the cases of the vaccine-induced blood clots, however, heparin appears to make the condition worse. Walensky said doctors heeded that warning, noting that the drug had not been used in any of the cases identified after the pause began.

The U.S. decision follows a similar one by the European Medicines Agency, which on Tuesday said the benefits of the J&J shot outweighed its risks and recommended adding a warning about unusual blood clots with low blood platelet counts to the vaccine’s product label. J&J resumed its rollout there.

The J&J probe followed an investigation in Europe of the AstraZeneca PLC vaccine, with which similar cases of blood clots were first identified. Dr. Peter Marks of the FDA said the cases appear so similar that a doctor would not be able to tell which vaccine caused them.

Both the J&J and AstraZeneca vaccine use different versions of a cold virus to deliver instructions for making coronavirus proteins into cells to produce an immune response. Marks said studies are underway to determine whether the adenovirus or something else is behind the rare blood clots.

Dr. William Moss, executive director of the International Vaccine Access Center at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, said the J&J vaccine will help advance the vaccination effort.

"Giving people the choice to receive a single-dose vaccine will help get more people vaccinated faster and will better protect some populations, such as those who are homeless or incarcerated," Moss said by email.

J&J has faced several setbacks since its vaccine gained U.S. emergency authorization in February, including drawing scrutiny over production shortfalls.

In the United States, 35% of adults are fully vaccinated and 53% have received at least one shot, according to CDC data. The United States leads the world with roughly 570,000 COVID-19 deaths.
 
Malaysia says Astrazeneca vaccine safe, will be used on elderly

"I confirm the vaccine developed by AstraZeneca is safe, and it will be administered to those aged 60 years and older," Malaysia's health minister Adham Baba said in a televised news conference.

Malaysian health authorities on Monday said the vaccine developed by Astrazeneca is safe for use, three days after the Southeast Asian nation recieved its first batch of the shots bought through the COVAX facility.

"I confirm the vaccine developed by AstraZeneca is safe, and it will be administered to those aged 60 years and older," Health Minister Adham Baba said in a televised news conference.

https://www.hindustantimes.com/world-news
 
A couple of relatives have had reactions to the astrazeneca vaccine. High temperature, aches, pains and feeling run down for a few days.

But even with that I don't think people should avoid the vaccine.
 
I have had both doses of Pfizer vaccine

First dose: no symptoms at all, not even needle pain

2nd dose: had arm pain, mild headache and light-headedness for 3 days
 
Pfizer's oral medicine for Covid-19 could be ready by next year: CEO

The only antiviral currently approved for use against the coronavirus disease (Covid-19) is Remdesivir, which is manufactured by Gilead Sciences. The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) gave the drug full approval in October after it was granted emergency use authorization in May last year.

Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla has said that an oral drug for treating coronavirus could be ready next year adding the company is working on two antivirals, an oral and an injectable.

"We are actually on two, one is injectable and the other one an oral (antiviral)... Particularly the attention is on the oral for the world and of us because provides several advantages and one of them is that you don't need to go to the hospital to get the treatment of which is the case with all the injectables so far but you can get it home," Bourla told CNBC in an interview on Tuesday, as cited by The Hill.

"If all goes well, and we implement the same speed that we are, and if regulators do the same, and they are, I hope that by the end of the year," Bourla added.

The only antiviral currently approved for use against the coronavirus is Remdesivir, which is manufactured by Gilead Sciences. The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) gave the drug full approval in October after it was granted emergency use authorization in May last year.

He also said the medication could be "way more effective against the multiple variants" of the virus than current options adding that the mechanism of action, of the antiviral, is not expected to be subject to mutations, "particularly because it's not acting on the spike, as we all know, all the mutations that we are hearing right now are seeing this in the proteins of the spike."

"This one doesn't work there so that allows us to believe that will be way more effective against the multiple variants. So, all good news. We are now progressing the studies and we will have more news around summer," the CEO added.

The Hill further reported that thus far, more than 121 million doses of the vaccine have been administered across the United States. (ANI)

https://www.hindustantimes.com/world-news/pfizers-oral-medicine-for-covid-19-could-be-ready-by-next-year-ceo-101619588643338.html
 
https://www.reuters.com/world/europe/exclusive-novavax-plans-ship-covid-19-vaccines-europe-late-2021-eu-source-2021-05-03/

Novavax has told the European Union it plans to begin delivering its COVID-19 vaccine to the bloc towards the end of this year, new guidance that could lead to a formal contract being signed as early as this week, an EU official told Reuters.

A deal would see Novavax supply a total of up to 200 million doses of the vaccine, providing the EU with booster shots to help contain the coronavirus and potentially guard against new variants, according to the official, who has direct knowledge of the discussions.

Novavax reached a preliminary deal with the bloc in December, but a final agreement has been delayed because the U.S. company has struggled to source some raw materials, Reuters reported in March.

The EU official, who declined to be identified because the matter is confidential, said Novavax still had production problems, but what had changed is that "now they have a delivery schedule".

Novavax told the EU in meetings over the last two weeks that it planned to send the first small shipments towards the end of this year, with the bulk to be delivered in 2022, according to the official, who said the shots would complement a huge planned supply of vaccines from Pfizer and BioNTech.

A spokesman for the EU Commission, which co-leads talks with vaccine makers together with governments of the 27-nation bloc, declined to comment because the matter is confidential.

Novavax said its negotiations with the EU were continuing. It declined to comment about the deliveries timeline, production problems or whether a formal deal was imminent.

Regardless of a possible deal, the EU's purchases remain conditional on the regulatory approval of the Novavax vaccine, which has been assessed under a rolling review by the European Medicines Agency (EMA) since February.

The EMA has not set a date for its decision on the vaccine, which has not yet been approved anywhere in the world.

The European Commission has repeatedly expressed confidence that it has secured enough doses to reach its goal of vaccinating at least 70% of its adult population by the end of July. The World Health Organization says about 70% of a population needs to be immunized to break transmission.

The EU is therefore now making plans for the coming years, to make sure the bloc will have enough boosters if they are needed to help keep COVID-19 in check and fight variants.

As part of this strategy the EU has already pencilled a huge deal with Pfizer-BioNTech for the supply of up to 1.8 billion doses of their vaccine in 2022 and 2023, the largest contract ever signed worldwide with a maker of COVID-19 shots.

Novavax's protein-based vaccine represents an "alternative or a complement" to the mRNA shot produced by Pfizer, the EU official said, although it will be available in much smaller amounts. Of the 200 million doses planned, half are optional and can be bought by the EU at a later date if desired.

“We will certainly add other potential vaccines, for example protein-based vaccines have also quite a potential,” European Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen said in late April when she announced the deal with Pfizer was about to be signed.

French drugmaker Sanofi, in partnership with British firm GlaxoSmithKline, is also trying to produce a protein-based COVID-19 vaccine and has already signed a supply deal with the EU. But their trials suffered a setback in December, delaying development.
 
Got my first dose of Chinese Vaccine today second jab will be on 25 this month. So far so good no sign of any side effect.
 
https://www.reuters.com/business/healthcare-pharmaceuticals/biontech-nearing-request-approval-longer-lasting-version-covid-vaccine-2021-05-04/

BioNTech is working on getting approval for a version of its COVID-19 vaccine which can be stored in fridges of 2 to 8 degree celsius for up to 6 months, Chief Executive Ugur Sahin said on Tuesday.

"Our first formulation had to be stored and shipped at minus 80 degrees. We have now, in the meantime, a formulation which is not yet approved... which can be stored at two to eight degrees," Sahin told a Financial Times conference panel, adding that data packages were being prepared for regulators.

"We will most likely reach six months stability at two to eight degrees," he said of the vaccine, which is being made with Pfizer.
 
The covid-19 vaccines are an extraordinary success story. The media should tell it that way.

Recent news coverage is fueling a pernicious narrative: What’s the point of getting a covid-19 vaccine if the vaccinated might still get infected, if protection doesn’t last that long and if the vaccine itself could lead to dangerous outcomes such as blood clots?

Clinicians need to address each concern head-on, and we need the media’s help to do it.

The science is squarely on our side. Last week, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released data on breakthrough coronavirus infections — meaning instances of fully vaccinated people testing positive. The data highlighted how effective vaccination is, but you might not have drawn that conclusion from news reports.

“So far, 5,800 fully vaccinated people have caught Covid anyway in the US, CDC says,” read one headline. “CDC reports 5,800 COVID-19 infections, 74 deaths in fully vaccinated people,” said another.

By themselves, the numbers sound concerning. But let’s take a closer look. An infection rate of 5,800 infections out of 77 million fully vaccinated people is less than 0.008 percent — a remarkably low rate. Compare this with 68,000 daily new infections in the United States — which, over a 30-day period, is nearly 100 times higher than the infection rate for those vaccinated. Put another way: A total of 5,800 infections among the inoculated is orders of magnitude better than 68,000 infections per day in the general population.

Furthermore, the CDC reported that nearly 30 percent of breakthrough infections were asymptomatic. Just 7 percent resulted in hospitalization, and 1 percent of those infected died. This is particularly stunning considering that the initial groups inoculated included the most medically frail; 80 percent of those over 65, who constituted 80 percent of earlier deaths, have now received one dose of the coronavirus vaccine. Even including this group most at risk for adverse outcomes from covid-19, there were only 74 deaths total among the fully vaccinated, compared with an average of more than 700 deaths daily overall.

The media needs to put these numbers into better perspective. No vaccine is 100 percent effective, and the covid-19 vaccines rank high in terms of providing extraordinary protection against infection. Among the vaccinated, the rate of severe illness — the endpoint that really matters — is also extremely low.

A headline like this one in the British Medical Journal is a much better descriptor: “U.S. reports low rate of new infections in people already vaccinated.” Another helpful framing appeared in this article from the Hill: “Hospitalizations have occurred in 0.0005 percent of all full vaccinations and deaths in almost 0.0001 percent.”

In the same vein, a headline such as “Pfizer CEO says third Covid vaccine dose likely needed within 12 months” needs more context. Some might use the possibility of a booster to question the need for vaccination — why bother if protection doesn’t last that long? In fact, we know that immunity from vaccines will last at least six months. If immunity wanes after that, or if new variants develop, a booster could extend protection. The takeaway should be that it’s great for scientists to continually optimize these already very effective vaccines. People should get inoculated now; a booster shot, if needed in time, would add to that protection.

The most concerning narrative from this past week involves the discovery of rare blood clots that could be associated with the Johnson & Johnson vaccine. I’ve argued that the initial pause on this vaccine was the right decision, though I worry that the length of the pause is allowing anti-vaccine activists to spread disinformation about vaccine safety.

Here’s how we need to reframe the pause. Federal health officials are being so cautious that they are willing to stop for a possible side effect that is literally so rare that it’s one in a million. That should make Americans feel more reassured about the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines, which have been given to more than 100 million people without a red-flag safety concern arising. If anything, there’s legitimate criticism about whether the pause will harm individuals who otherwise could have been vaccinated during this time — but no one should doubt that vaccine safety is the top priority.

Anthony S. Fauci, President Biden’s chief medical adviser, predicts that the CDC will make a decision about the Johnson & Johnson vaccine by the end of the week. Very likely, the pause will be lifted, perhaps with an added warning as the European Medicines Agency has done. When this announcement is made, it will be essential not only to talk about its safety, but also to emphasize why we need vaccines.

Put simply: More than 560,000 Americans have died from covid-19. Vaccines protect us against this deadly disease and are our pathway back to pre-pandemic life. Science has delivered a remarkable breakthrough, and all of us — from the medical establishment to the government to the media — should be putting the minimal risks into perspective while celebrating the vaccines’ overwhelming benefits.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/opin...ll-it-that-way/#click=https://t.co/1kjSMU0rQm
 
https://news.sky.com/story/covid-19-us-president-joe-biden-expects-pfizer-vaccine-to-be-approved-for-12-to-15-year-olds-12297347?dcmp=snt-sf-twitter

US President Joe Biden said the government is gearing up to give the coronavirus vaccine to 12 to 15-year-olds.

Mr Biden announced the next phase in America's vaccine rollout and said that the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is expected to approve the Pfizer jab for children as young as 12. All of the current vaccines are authorised for use in people over 16 in America. The president also laid out plans to vaccinate 70% of American adults - a total of 160 million - by 4 July.

The target is well within reach given that 105 million have already had COVID-19 jabs and the US is vaccinating nearly a million adults per day.

However, the vaccination rate is half of what it was just three weeks ago. Mr Biden had previously set the goal of life returning to normal by 4 July.

He said his administration would focus on getting the vaccine to more rural areas of the country, using smaller locations as mass vaccination sites were wound down.

"Now that we have the vaccine supply, we're focused on convincing even more Americans to show up and get the vaccine that is available to them," Mr Biden said during a White House press briefing.

At the start of his presidency, Biden targeted getting 100 million people vaccinated during his first 100 days in office, which he later increased to 200 million people. "I want American parents to know that if that announcement comes, we are ready to move immediately," Mr Biden said, adding that 20,000 pharmacies across the country would serve as vaccination sites as soon as FDA approval came through.

To meet the president's broader target, the government will work to make the vaccine accessible by having thousands of pharmacies allow walk-in appointments.
 
Had my second and final Moderna jab yesterday. The side effects began in the middle of the night - my whole body ached but that was not the problem. It was the lack of sleep because of that. I feel much better now. Also there's just a little bit of soreness on my arm where I received the jab.
 
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-australia-57095035

Australia has secured 25 million doses of the Moderna Covid-19 vaccine as the government seeks to boost supplies to support its delayed vaccination drive.

The government said 10 million doses of the mRNA vaccine are due to arrive by the end of the year, and 15 million shots in 2022.

Australia's rollout has lagged behind other nations after initial delays and caution over the AstraZeneca vaccine.

The country has so far administered 2.8 million shots of a Covid vaccine.

That is well short of the 50 million jabs needed to fully vaccinate its population. The country's immunisation programme was recently opened to all Australians aged over 50.

Australia had originally aimed to have its population vaccinated by October, relying heavily on the AstraZeneca vaccine.

But this target was scrapped after concerns rose over the risk of rare blood clots, forcing the government in April to recommend that people under 50 receive a different jab.

It is also using the Pfizer vaccine but there are only 20 million doses currently in stock. The government has placed an order for another 20 million doses.

Australia now says it plans to have vaccinated all Australians who want the jab by the end of the year.

The Moderna vaccine still requires approval by Australia's Therapeutic Goods Administration but it is seen as a welcome boost to the country's supplies, according to the government.

"Whilst we know we have more than enough vaccine already ordered to cover our primary vaccination program this year, this provides some additional redundancy," said top medical official Dr Brendan Murphy.

Officials said the deal also included a potential pathway for the vaccine to be manufactured locally.

Australia's Labor opposition welcomed the Moderna deal but said it was overdue, noting that many other developed nations were already using the vaccine.

"If the rest of the world struck deals with Moderna as early as last year for access to this state-of-the-art vaccine, why do Australians have to wait to the end of this year?" said Labor spokesman Jim Chalmers.

Moderna said its second-round booster shots are still being tested, but are expected to neutralise different variants of the virus.

Earlier this month, the US firm released positive results from the trials of a modified vaccine aimed at the South African and Brazilian variants.

"We appreciate the partnership and support from the government of Australia with this first supply agreement for doses of the Moderna Covid-19 vaccine and our variant booster candidates," Moderna chief executive Stephane Bancel said.

Australia also has a deal for 51 million doses of the Novovax shot, but that vaccine is still in clinical trials.

Despite its vaccination rates being behind other nations, Australia is one of the few places in the world where there is no widespread community transmission of Covid-19.

On Thursday, the nation had just five active cases of the virus in the community, and 171 cases in its hotel quarantine system for returning travellers.

The country has managed to stave off a major outbreak on the scale seen in other nations, such as the US, UK and India, by shutting its borders and periodically enforcing snap lockdowns.
 
Had my 2nd dose of pfizer a week ago, no side effects whatsoever - I wonder if side effects mainly occur in older people or people with underlying conditions.
 
The Pfizer and AstraZeneca coronavirus vaccines are highly effective against the variant identified in India after two doses, a study has found.

Two jabs of either vaccine give a similar level of protection against symptomatic disease from the Indian variant as they do for the Kent one.

However, both vaccines were only 33% effective against the Indian variant three weeks after the first dose.

This compared with 50% effectiveness against the Kent variant.

Public Health England, which ran the study, said the vaccines are likely to be even more effective at preventing hospital admission and deaths.

Health Secretary Matt Hancock said the findings made him "increasingly confident" that the government was on track for the final stage of easing restrictions in England on 21 June.

He said: "I'm increasingly confident that we're on track for the road map because this data shows that the vaccine after two doses works just as effectively [against the Indian variant], and we all know that the vaccine is our way out of this."

The health secretary added that the data showed that getting both doses of the vaccine was "absolutely vital".

The Pfizer vaccine was found to be 88% effective at stopping symptomatic disease from the Indian variant two weeks after the second dose, compared with 93% effectiveness against the Kent variant.

The AstraZeneca jab was 60% effective against the Indian variant, compared with 66% against the Kent variant.

Public Health England (PHE) said the difference in effectiveness between the vaccines after two doses may be explained by the fact that rollout of second doses of AstraZeneca was later than for the Pfizer vaccine, which was approved first.

Other data shows it takes longer to reach maximum effectiveness with the AstraZeneca vaccine, PHE said.

Some 12,675 genome-sequenced cases were included in the study, which took place between 5 April and 16 May. Only 1,054 of those cases were of the Indian variant, known as B.1.617.2.
 
Hold your horses....

===

In a major achievement in its fight against the novel coronavirus, Pakistan on Monday announced that it has developed a homemade vaccine — PakVac — with the help of China's Cansino Bio after rigorous quality control checks.

The step is aimed at significantly reducing Pakistan’s dependence on other countries for Covid-19 vaccine.

The country started its vaccination campaign in February with doses donated by the government of China. The campaign started with frontline healthcare workers and then inoculation of the senior citizens in the second phase.

Pakistan has now started the vaccination of people aged 30 and above. Over five million people have been vaccinated against Covid-19 in the country so far.

"Congratulations to the NIH (National Institute of Health) Pak team and its leadership for successful fill/finish (from concentrate) of the Cansino vaccine with the help of Cansino Bio Inc. China," Special Assistant to Prime Minister on Health Dr Faisal Sultan wrote on his official Twitter handle.

He said that the vaccine has passed rigorous internal quality assurance testing, considering it an important step to help the vaccine supply line.

An official from the Ministry of National Health Services has said that due to the agreement on technology transfer, the NIH would be able to produce three million doses per month.

NHS had announced that the first batch of China’s single-dose CanSino Covid-19 vaccine would be available for administration to the citizens by the end of May.

"The first batch of bulk CanSino vaccine is being processed at the National Institute of Health’s plant, which was set up for this purpose last month, and a specially trained team is working on it," the official said earlier this month.

On Friday, the National Assembly was informed that Pakistan has started local production of anti-Covid vaccine.

Parliamentary Secretary for NHS Nausheen Hamid told the house during question hour that the first batch of CanSino vaccine is currently being manufactured at the NIH.

Express Tribune
 
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