Vaccine unlikely before March ’21
WHO chief brushes off calls to quit
WASHINGTON, April 23, (Agencies): Food and Drug Administration Commissioner Stephen Hahn said Wednesday he did not anticipate a production of a vaccine for novel coronavirus before March 2021.
In an interview with CBS news, Hahn said experts still estimated it could take a year or 12-18 months to develop a vaccine against the virus.
“That means a vaccine would not be available until around March 2021,” he said, “but we’re really trying to accelerate the efforts.”
Hahn wanred against possible second wave of coronavirus next winter. “The whole task force set of doctors is concerned about the second wave,” he added.
“That’s why we have built into the plan the surveillance mechanisms to look for the respiratory illnesses and then to do the appropriate testing at that time,” he said.
Hahn said surveillance and testing would be a critical part of the reopening plan to “allow us to move forward.”
The World Health Organization chief said Wednesday he hopes the United States will reconsider its freeze in funding for his agency and vowed to keep working on “saving lives” despite calls from some US lawmakers for his resignation.
WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said he hopes the US believes the agency is “an important investment, not just to help others, but for the US to stay safe” amid the pandemic.
President Donald Trump last week announced a temporary halt to US funding for the UN agency, alleging a WHO cover-up and missteps handling the outbreak. The US is the Geneva-based agency’s biggest donor, providing hundreds of millions of dollars’ worth of support each year.
In Washington, officials said Wednesday the halt involved new funding for the WHO, and was expected to continue for 60 to 90 days.
A group of Republican lawmakers in the House of Representatives last week suggested that Trump should condition any voluntary US contributions to the WHO this year on Tedros’ resignation.
Asked about whether he was considering that, Tedros said: “I will continue to work day and night because this is a blessed work, actually, and responsibility saving lives, and I will focus on that.”
Dr Mike Ryan, the WHO’s emergencies chief, said the US pause would impact core agency activities like child immunizations, efforts to eradicate polio, and “essential health services and trauma management in some of the most vulnerable populations in the world.”
“I very much hope that ... this is a 60-day stay on funding,” and no more, he said. “That’s why you don’t see me complaining, because we just need to get on with it.”
At a news conference in Washington on Wednesday, US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo announced a new tranche of US assistance to specific countries, bringing the total of virus aid this year to more than $700 million.
Other US officials said the suspended money for the WHO would be used for the same purpose, just distributed to individual groups — eliminating the agency as a conduit.