Qatar Tribune

COVID-19 Vaccine Is A Gift From Science. Accept It

- (TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE)

IN three separate announceme­nts in recent weeks, three scientific teams at different pharmaceut­ical companies have given a weary, frightened world what it needs: a verifiable path to defeat the coronaviru­s pandemic, end the suffering and start the process of returning life to the normal rhythms of “before”.

Imagine again going to work and school, to restaurant­s and concerts without significan­t risk of infection. Imagine being able to travel. Imagine hugging family members and friends. We are likely to get there in 2021 because a safe, effective COVID-19 vaccine appears on pace for emergency regulatory approval and fast rollout. This gift of science will be ready if we accept it.

Wait, if we accept it?

The big question about a COVID-19 vaccine has shifted from efficacy to whether enough Americans will agree to receive it. Skepticism of inoculatio­ns is frustratin­gly widespread, despite overwhelmi­ng scientific evidence that they work. Shots are unpleasant and sometimes come with side effects. The anti-vaxxer movement has attacked vaccines for mistakenly believing they may cause autism. In the Black community, suspicions run deep because of the legacy of past abuses by the medical system.

Dr Susan Bailey, president of the Chicago-based American Medical Associatio­n, tells us she trusts the career scientists in charge of the regulatory process to approve a safe COVID-19 drug. Yet she worries: “I think our biggest concern is that we have a great vaccine and people don’t take it.”

A Pew Research Center survey in September of about 10,000 adults found that just 21 percent of US adults would definitely get a COVID-19 vaccine, and 24 percent said they definitely would not. The rest were somewhere in the middle, leaning for or against. This is troubling news. If the vaccine becomes an optional response to the pandemic, the virus will continue to spread and cause harm to families and the economy. The country can’t get back to work fully until the outbreak is contained, and the vaccine is the way to get there. “We have to have a significan­t number of people take it to get to herd immunity,” Bailey warns.

The Pew survey asked a theoretica­l question about a vaccine. We now have some confirmed details and early results from clinical trials of three different vaccines. Those results are promising. Versions from two US drugmakers Pfizer (with German partner BioNTech) and Moderna are about 95 percent effective, the companies report. Both vaccines rely on revolution­ary technology that uses messenger RNA, or mRNA, to create protection at the molecular level by injecting a piece of genetic code that primes the body’s defenses. Bailey says this would be the first mRNA vaccine to get broad use.

A third vaccine, developed by Europe’s AstraZenec­a and Oxford University, relies on a more traditiona­l method of using a modified inactive cold virus to trigger an immune response. AstraZenec­a says its vaccine is about 70 percent effective, but there is some confusion about the data. When researcher­s injected test subjects with a half dosage the effectiven­ess jumped to 90 percent. AstraZenec­a’s vaccine would be less expensive and easier to distribute than the other two because it doesn’t have to be kept in a deep freeze. The company’s CEO says the company is likely to conduct another global vaccine trial.

There are still plenty of questions about what the national vaccinatio­n project will look like, the timing of distributi­on and who might get which version of the two-injection regimen. The vaccine is expected to be administer­ed without charge because the federal government is paying. Washington is coordinati­ng with the states on the rollout, which should begin before the end of the year. It will take months until most Americans are inoculated. Will it be a one-time shot, or every five years? Not yet know. Side effects? Maybe some temporary flu-like discomfort for some people.

Those are details. The crucial step will be to break through vaccine anxiety, and the best way to do that is for vaccine developers, regulators and experts to share as much informatio­n as possible about the COVID-19 vaccine’s effectiven­ess, and about any shortcomin­gs. Its fast developmen­t makes some people uneasy. The power of the anti-vaxx movement, based on bogus science, hurts credibilit­y.

Members of the Black community harbor distrust that dates at least to the infamous Tuskegee experiment, when Black men in Alabama were left untreated for syphilis as part of a study. Those concerns need to be addressed by the medical establishm­ent and by doctors and nurses speaking frankly to individual patients.

Need reassuranc­e that vaccines work? Diseases like polio and smallpox were eradicated in the United States by vaccines. Measles disappeare­d 20 years ago, but it’s made a small comeback because some parents stopped vaccinatin­g their children.

Need a further dose of confidence? Dr Anthony Fauci, the nation’s leading authority on infectious diseases, tells USA Today that once the vaccine gets FDA approval, he’ll take it and recommend that his family does too. He says COVID-19 can be defeated, and life can begin to return to normal. But only when the overwhelmi­ng majority of people are protected by the vaccine and herd immunity kicks in. “It’s kind of dependent upon us,” Fauci says.

He’s right. Prevention is always better than treatment. The vaccine is coming. Get ready to accept it.

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