Yorkshire Post

New funding for trials to protect UK’s most vulnerable

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THE GOVERNMENT is to provide £3.2m for trials into new treatments that could prevent the most vulnerable from becoming infected with Covid-19.

The Department for Health and Social Care said hundreds of thousands of people could potentiall­y benefit from the treatments aimed at preventing the spread of the disease in care homes and among those with weakened immune systems.

The Project-V trial, run by Cambridge University, will look at treatments that could provide protection over and above that offered by the vaccines to immunocomp­romised groups such as kidney dialysis patients.

It will receive £1.5m for the trials, which are expected to last at least 12 months, with 2,250 people taking part.

If they prove successful, the Department for Health and Social Care said there were 500,000 people in England alone who could benefit from the treatments, which would be made rapidly available on the NHS.

A further £1.7m will go to the Project-CH trial, run by Nottingham University, which is looking at treatments to reduce transmissi­on and illness from the virus among care-home residents and staff.

It aims to recruit more than 400 care homes to take part in the trials, which will run for around two years.

Professor Chris Whitty, the chief medical officer for England, said: “The more proven clinical tools we can use to protect these very vulnerable groups the better, so I encourage as many eligible individual­s, care-home operators and residents to take part.”

Innovation Minister Lord Bethell added: “Vulnerable groups have been disproport­ionately impacted by the virus and these Government-funded trials will provide us with invaluable data so we can ensure they get every possible form of defence.”

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