Daily Observer (Jamaica)

Watchdog approves use in UK of ‘vaccine for the world’

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LONDON (AP) — Britain authorised an easy-to-handle coronaviru­s vaccine Wednesday and decided to stretch out the time between doses to allow more people to get some level of protection faster as infections surge. The first greenlight for the shot dubbed the “vaccine for the world” brought a measure of hope that the pandemic could be brought under control.

The vaccine developed by Oxford University and drugmaker Astrazenec­a is expected to be relied on in many countries because of its low cost and the fact that it can be kept in refrigerat­ors rather than at the ultra-cold or freezer temperatur­es some other vaccines require.

“This wonderful news brings renewed hope at a time of rising infections and unpreceden­ted pressure on health services in the UK and beyond. It is now critical that this hope can be shared by all nations,” said Anna Marriot, health policy manager at Oxfam aid agency.

Even as the authorisat­ion was welcomed as a significan­t developmen­t in efforts to contain the virus that has killed nearly 1.8 million, the change in British policy on administer­ing the shots drove home concerns about a new, potentiall­y more contagious variant that authoritie­s blame for rising hospitalis­ations in Britain. The new variant has been found in several countries, including the US.

Because infections are spreading so rapidly in the UK, officials are now recommendi­ng prioritisi­ng delivering a first dose to as many people as possible for both of the vaccines authorised for use in the country: the Astrazenec­a one and another from Pfizerbion­tech. Officials say both protect people even after just one of the two recommende­d doses — and that increasing the time between doses might even have a benefit.

“The immediate urgency is for rapid and high levels of vaccine uptake,” Wei Shen Lim, chair of the Joint Committee on Vaccinatio­n and Immunisati­on, told reporters Wednesday. “This will allow the greatest number of eligible people to receive vaccine in the shortest time possible, and that will protect the greatest number of lives.”

Hundreds of thousands of people in the UK have already received at least one shot of the Pfizer-biontech vaccine. British Health Secretary Matt Hancock said the roll-out of the Astrazenec­a one will start January 4.

The Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency, which recommende­d the Astrazenec­a vaccine for emergency use, did not endorse one vaccine over the other.

 ?? (Photo: AP) ?? A researcher in a laboratory at the Jenner Institute in Oxford, England, works on the coronaviru­s vaccine developed by Astrazenec­a and Oxford University.
(Photo: AP) A researcher in a laboratory at the Jenner Institute in Oxford, England, works on the coronaviru­s vaccine developed by Astrazenec­a and Oxford University.

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