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5,000 people from Saudi Arabia to undergo vaccine trials once approved FASTFACT

- Deema Al-Khudair Jeddah

Around 5,000 people from Saudi Arabia will undergo vaccine trials once a COVID-19 vaccine is approved by the country’s Food and Drug Authority, an infectious disease specialist in the Kingdom said.

“We will see results according to usage,” Dr. Wael Bajahmoom told Al-Ekhbariya in an interview. “We are part of the World Health Organizati­on and we will use the vaccine that the country is looking for after the authorizat­ion of the Food and Drug Authority. Once approved by the Food and Drug Authority, approximat­ely 5,000 from the Saudi community will be supervised for this vaccine trial.”

He discussed the decision of pharmaceut­ical firm Eli Lilly and Company to pause its trial of a combinatio­n antibody treatment for safety reasons, saying there were many factors to consider such as what it took to create a vaccine, was the dosage to temporaril­y slow down the rate of infection or were there certain goals to be met.

Bajahmoom also said that vaccines went through rigorous testing before they were released.

Saudi Arabia on Wednesday reported 21 new coronaviru­srelated deaths.

“In the medical field, we always stress that vaccines must be completely safe to use. To not cause any side effects or harm to users, and to protect people from the pandemic for a long time. What’s the use of creating a vaccine that will only protect us for a month or three? Another factor is that vaccines must be effective for special cases too — the elderly, those with immune system disorders — it must be effective. Most countries do not release vaccines early. They first must pass rigorous clinical testing.”

There were three important stages. The developmen­t stage was when scientists discussed the possibilit­y of using the virus in the method of killing it, and using it in genetic modificati­on or for patients in general. Some of it was tested on animals in laboratori­es and specialist­s saw if the results were effective on animals or not.

“And in the final stage it is tested on humans in a limited way then, later, on a larger scale. Since the start of the pandemic, the Ministry of Health never allowed the use of any vaccine unless it has been tested and approved (safely) globally. This indicates that safety is first in the Kingdom.”

Saudi Arabia on Wednesday reported 21 new coronaviru­s-related deaths. The death toll now stands at 5,108. There were 501 new cases, meaning 340,590 people have now contracted the disease. There are 8,662 active cases, and 830 of these are in critical condition.

There have been 481 recoveries, taking the total number to 326,820. Saudi Arabia has so far conducted more than 7.16 million PCR tests, with 51,849 carried out in the last 24 hours.

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