Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Companies working on vaccines pledge to put science above politics

- Los Angeles Times (TNS)

The chief executives of nine drug manufactur­ers leading the race to produce vaccines against the coronaviru­s signed a joint pledge Tuesday in an effort to boost public confidence in any vaccines that are ultimately approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion or similar agencies around the world.

The companies said they will follow “high ethical standards and sound scientific principles” as they conduct their timesensit­ive work against a global pandemic.

“We believe this pledge will help ensure public confidence in the rigorous scientific and regulatory process by which COVID-19 vaccines are evaluated and may ultimately be approved,” the companies said.

Public health officials in the U.S. worry that if many Americans don’t trust the vaccines that become available and decline to get them, it will be harder to reduce the spread of COVID-19.

Specifical­ly, the nine firms pledged to:

– Make the safety of people who receive coronaviru­s vaccines their “top priority.”

– Conduct clinical trials of their experiment­al vaccines according to “high scientific and ethical standards.”

– Seek regulatory approval for candidate vaccines only after safety and efficacy have been establishe­d through Phase 3 clinical trials.

– Produce a range of vaccines to meet the differing needs of people around the world.

The pledge was signed by the chief executives of American drugmakers Johnson & Johnson, Merck, Moderna, Novavax and Pfizer, and European companies Astrazenec­a, Biontech, Glaxosmith­kline and Sanofi.

They noted that collective­ly, their firms have developed more than 70 vaccines against “some of the world’s most complex and deadly public health threats.”

The statement comes amid worries that the FDA will be under political pressure from President Donald Trump to provide emergency use authorizat­ion to a vaccine before the tests needed to prove it is safe and effective are finished.

Those concerns were renewed last week after it came to light that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention had asked public health department­s around the country to prepare to distribute a coronaviru­s vaccine in a matter of weeks. Plans should be drafted no later than Oct. 1, a date that is in line with the “earliest possible release of COVID-19 vaccine,” according to a four-page memo from

Dr. Nancy Messonnier, director of the CDC’S National Center for Immunizati­on and Respirator­y Diseases.

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 ?? Getty Images/tns ?? An EMS medic checks the temperatur­e of a possible COVID-19 patient before transporti­ng him to the hospital on Aug. 13 in Houston.
Getty Images/tns An EMS medic checks the temperatur­e of a possible COVID-19 patient before transporti­ng him to the hospital on Aug. 13 in Houston.
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