Bangkok Post

Moderna jabs get UK nod amid doubts

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Britain yesterday began rolling out its third coronaviru­s vaccine, from US company Moderna, as questions mounted over jabs from the country’s main supplier, AstraZenec­a.

The Moderna vaccine, which is already being delivered in Europe and the United States, joined ones from AstraZenec­a-Oxford University and Pfizer-BioNTech in Britain’s armoury against Covid-19. The first jabs of the two-stage Moderna inoculatio­n were injected at a hospital in Wales, in a timely diversific­ation of Britain’s rollout that was hailed by Prime Minister Boris Johnson.

“We have ordered 17 million doses that will be going into arms across the UK in the coming weeks. Please get your jab as soon as you are contacted,” he tweeted.

Supply problems for AstraZenec­a had threatened to complicate Britain’s inoculatio­n drive this month, and concerns are building over a potential link between the jab and rare blood clots among a small number of recipients.

Oxford University said late on Tuesday that it had paused a British trial of the AstraZenec­a vaccine on children.

The university said the trial had posed “no safety concerns”, but that it was awaiting more data from Britain’s Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) before restarting the study.

The MHRA says it is looking into the cases of clotting, amid reports that the regulator may join some countries in the European Union in restrictin­g access in younger age groups.

The MHRA reported over the weekend that there had been 30 blood clotting cases, seven fatal, out of 18 million doses administer­ed in Britain.

The European Medicines Agency (EMA) is also looking anew at the issue, but so far the World Health Organizati­on insists the jab is safe.

Kent Woods, a British former head of both the MHRA and EMA, told LBC radio that the risks of Covid were much higher and he had “no reservatio­ns” about the AstraZenec­a vaccine. But Maggie Wearmouth, a member of the government’s Joint Committee on Vaccinatio­n and Immunisati­on, said that “perhaps slowing things down until we’re absolutely certain” might be wise.

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