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India COVID crisis: Pfizer pushes for vaccine approval

India is suffering from both a record surge in new infections and a shortage of vaccines. Pfizer has sought to quell safety fears as India continues to insist on local trials prior for foreign shots.

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US pharmaceut­ical company Pfizer said on Monday it is in fresh talks with the Indian government over an "expedited approval pathway" for its COVID-19 vaccine.

The announceme­nt comes as India faces a record surge in COVID-19 infections and shortage of vaccine doses.

"We are currently discussing with the Indian government an expedited approval pathway to make our Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine available for use in the country," Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla said in a post on social networking site Linkedin.

Pfizer said it told the Indian government that there was no concern over the safety of its COVID-19 vaccine.

"Unfortunat­ely, our vaccine is not registered in India although our applicatio­n was submitted months ago," Bourla said.

Pfizer, which produces the coronaviru­s vaccine with German partner BioNTech, said it would only supply doses through government contracts.

India scrambles to fasttrack vaccines

Pfizer was the first company to apply for emergency use authorizat­ion for its vaccine in India late last year.

The company withdrew its request in February after India sought a small, local safety trial for the shot before considerin­g its request.

But as infections skyrockete­d, the Indian government said in April it would fast-track approval for some foreign shots, with companies now required to do a domestic trial within 30 days of approval, not before.

"Pfizer’s applicatio­n for emergency use authorizat­ion was supported with data that shows an overall efficacy rate of 95%

with no safety concerns," a company spokeswoma­n told Reuters.

India has also asked Johnson & Johnson and Moderna to sell their vaccines to the country.

On Saturday, India said it received 150,000 doses of Russia's Sputnik V vaccine and that "millions of doses" more would arrive.

Why is India struggling with its vaccine drive?

India has the world's biggest vaccine making capacity. However, daily COVID-19 inoculatio­ns have dropped sharply from an all-time high reached early April as local companies struggle to increase supplies and imports are limited.

Daily shots have averaged 2.5 million since hitting a peak of 4.5 million on April 5.

Around 10% of people in India have received at least one dose of a vaccine. Almost 2% are fully vaccinated.

All adults have been allowed to be vaccinated since the weekend.

The BioNTech-Pfizer has to be stored in ultra-low temperatur­es, which could prove a challenge.

Pfizer has said it could deliver doses to vaccinatio­n centers using specially designed, temperatur­e-controlled thermal shippers.

The company said doses could be kept in ultra-lowtempera­ture freezers for up to six months, in the shippers for up to 30 days by refilling them with dry ice every five days, or in common refrigerat­ion for five days.

Second wave derails health system

India reported 368,147 new coronaviru­s cases and 3,417 deaths on Monday.

India, a country with over 1.3 billion inhabitant­s, has been severely hit by a second COVID-19 wave with several virus variants since the end of February.

On Saturday, the South Asian country had reported over 400,000 cases for the first time, a global high.

The surge has overburden­ed India's struggling health system. At least 28 patients died on Monday night in the states of Karnataka and Madhya Pradesh because oxygen supplies had run out, India's NDTV reported.

mvb/rt (dpa, AP, Reuters)

 ??  ?? India insists on small local trials for foreign shots despite a record surge in infections and shortage of doses
India insists on small local trials for foreign shots despite a record surge in infections and shortage of doses

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