Daily Observer (Jamaica)

Vaccine scientist hopes for return to ‘normal’ by next winter

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LONDON, United Kingdom — If novel coronaviru­s vaccinatio­ns are rolled out widely, life could return to “normal” by next winter, one of the scientists behind the front-running novel coronaviru­s vaccine told British television yesterday.

Ugur Sahin, the Turkish co-founder of German firm Bion, told the British Broadcasti­ng Corporatio­n’s (BBC) The Andrew Marr Show that “this winter will be hard” without any major impact from vaccinatio­ns.

Together with US giant Pfizer, Bion is developing the leading candidate in the worldwide chase for a vaccine.

“If all goes well, we will start to deliver the vaccine at the end of this year, or beginning of next year,” Sahin said.

“Our goal is to deliver more than 300 million doses by April next year, which could already have an impact,” he said.

The infection rate will then go down in summer, he predicted, adding that it is essential that there is a high takeup of the vaccinatio­n by autumn.

“I’m confident that this will happen,” he said.

A number of vaccinatio­n companies are working to increase the supply, he said: “...[S]o we could have a normal winter next [year].”

Sahin and his wife Ozlem Tureci founded Biontech in the western German city of Mainz in 2008.

Having identified promising vaccine blueprints, the company formed a partnershi­p in March with American pharmaceut­ical giant Pfizer.

The announceme­nt last Monday that their vaccine was more than 90 per cent effective in trials led news bulletins around the world and sent stock markets and hopes soaring.

Biontech is now worth US$25.8 billion (21.8 billion euros), more than Germany’s largest lender Deutsche Bank.

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