The Manila Times

US approves third Covid-19 vaccine

-

WASHINGTON, D.C.: The Covid-battered United States authorized Johnson & Johnson’s vaccine for emergency use Saturday (Sunday in Manila), offering a glimmer of hope as Britain said farewell to fundraisin­g war veteran Captain Tom Moore who died of the virus earlier this month.

US President Joe Biden hailed his country’s announceme­nt of its third available vaccine but said the nation’s battle was far from over.

“This is exciting news for all Americans, and an encouragin­g developmen­t in our efforts to bring an end to the crisis,” Biden said in a statement, but warned Americans “cannot let our guard down now or assume that victory is inevitable.”

The single-shot J&J vaccine is highly effective at preventing severe Covid-19, including against newer variants, the US Food and Drug Administra­tion (FDA) said before giving it a green light.

The news comes following passage in the House of Representa­tives of a vast $1.9 trillion package — including $1,400 payouts to most Americans and billions of

dollars to boost vaccine delivery, help schools reopen and fund local government­s — which will now move to the Senate.

The bill is on track to be the second largest US stimulus ever, illustrati­ng the huge effort needed to tackle the multiple crises unleashed by a pandemic that has killed more than half a million in the United States, with the toll climbing by another 1,849 fatalities in 24 hours on Saturday.

Meanwhile Europeans continue to live under some of the world’s strictest restrictio­ns — and in France they just got tougher.

Two cities, northern Dunkirk and southern Nice, locked down over the weekends to halt the spread.

“We have to do something as Covid is getting worse in the region,” Charlie Kentish, a British resident taking an early morning walk in Nice, told Agence France-Presse. He was resigned to spending his weekends playing video games with his teenage children.

In Britain, 100-year-old war veteran Tom Moore helped lift the Covid-induced gloom last year by staging fundraisin­g events including completing 100 lengths of his back garden using a walking frame.

After his campaign went viral, he raised nearly £33 million ($45 million, 37.4 million euros) for healthcare charities and was knighted for his efforts.

His funeral, a small family ceremony, was shown live on national television and he was honored with a flypast of a World War 2 plane.

The rollout of vaccines has improved the prospects greatly for many older people, with Britain excelling in its distributi­on to vulnerable groups.

‘Long Covid’

With the pandemic now having killed more than 2.5 million people worldwide, restrictio­ns are being reimposed and tightened in countries ranging from Brazil to the Czech Republic.

Even in relatively unscathed New Zealand, the biggest city Auckland was thrust back into lockdown on Saturday shortly after a three-day shutdown ended.

A small cluster has been linked to a school, but the country’s caseload still pales in comparison with the numbers seen in Europe and the Americas.

But globally there is growing concern over cases of “long Covid,” where people suffer symptoms for months after the initial illness.

Areli Torres, a 31-year-old engineer from Mexico, told Agence France-Presse she fell ill for a few days last June, but months later she is still suffering symptoms including numbness in parts of her body.

“Everything’s uncertain. Everything’s been an ordeal. I’ve seen four doctors,” she said, adding it had taken seven months just to get the correct diagnosis.

The World Health Organizati­on this week urged government­s to prioritize understand­ing the longterm effects of infections.

 ?? AFP PHOTO ?? BACK IN SCHOOL
Mask-clad Palestinia­n pupils attend a class amid the coronaviru­s pandemic at a school run by the United Nations in the Nuseirat refugee camp in the Gaza Strip on February 27, 2021.
AFP PHOTO BACK IN SCHOOL Mask-clad Palestinia­n pupils attend a class amid the coronaviru­s pandemic at a school run by the United Nations in the Nuseirat refugee camp in the Gaza Strip on February 27, 2021.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines