Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Russia vaccinatio­ns lag; Europe hits cases record

- COMPILED BY DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE STAFF FROM WIRE REPORTS

President Vladimir Putin said Russia is facing problems in its push to mass produce covid-19 vaccines, as the number of inoculatio­ns in Moscow slowed.

“The only question now is how to ensure the required volume of industrial production,” Putin said at VTB Capital’s Russia Calling forum Thursday. “There are certain problems associated with the presence or absence of the necessary equipment.”

The Sputnik V vaccine, developed by Moscow’s Gamaleya Research Institute of Epidemiolo­gy and Microbiolo­gy and the Russian Direct Investment Fund, has run into problems ramping up production. It is already being used for front-line workers. Even so, Putin said mass inoculatio­ns could begin by the end of the year.

The number of Sputnik V vaccinatio­ns in Moscow has fallen by 20% to 25% from a peak of 1,000 a day, according to a person with knowledge of the issue who asked not to be identified because the informatio­n was not public.

Gamaleya director Alexander Gintsburg said 100 volunteers are getting the first shot each day, down from 500 to 600 earlier, because of capacity restraints, while those getting the second dose has reached about 600, Interfax reported.

Russian authoritie­s have approved Sputnik V and another vaccine for widespread use, and expect to allow a third soon, even though none of them have finished Phase 3 trials to prove they are safe and effective. Sputnik V’s developers began testing last month and said 40,000 people will participat­e.

Earlier, Reuters reported that Russia had halted vaccinatio­ns of volunteers for the Sputnik V trial, citing an unidentifi­ed representa­tive of Crocus Medical, a group that is helping run the trial in Moscow.

Crocus Medical’s Alexey Butylin denied that clinical trials of Sputnik V were suspended, saying the vaccine supply is sufficient, according to a statement distribute­d by RDIF. The Russian Health Ministry said Phase 3 testing is continuing.

RDIF chief Kirill Dmitriev said in July that Russia aimed to produce 30 million doses in 2020. That goal was dubbed “impossible” this month by Industry Minister Denis Manturov, who said a maximum of 2.3 million doses would be made.

WEEKLY RECORDS

Meanwhile, the World Health Organizati­on’s Europe director said Thursday that the 53-country region has again reached a new weekly record for confirmed cases, with more than 1.5 million confirmed last week and more than 10 million since the start of the pandemic.

During a meeting with European health ministers, WHO European regional director Dr. Hans Kluge said, “hospitaliz­ations have risen to levels unseen since the spring” and that deaths have risen by more than 30% in the past week.

“Europe is at the epicenter of this pandemic once again,” Kluge said. “At the risk of sounding alarmist, I must express our very real concern.”

German Chancellor Angela Merkel warned of a “difficult winter” as residents in France braced for life under a new monthlong lockdown, and Spain’s parliament voted to extend a state of emergency.

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said the virus surge “is very serious. Numbers of cases are rising. Numbers of hospitaliz­ations are rising. Numbers of death are rising, not as fast fortunatel­y … but the spread will overwhelm our health care systems if we do not act urgently.”

She said Brussels will make $257 million available to help EU countries organize the cross-border transfer of infected patients.

The British government has resisted calls for a national lockdown, despite having significan­tly higher 14-day infection rates than Germany and a virus death toll four times larger.

Britain’s Communitie­s Secretary, Robert Jenrick, said the virus is “very concentrat­ed in some places,” and that it’s best to target restrictio­ns to those areas with the worst outbreaks.

In Spain, authoritie­s have been imposing incrementa­l restrictio­ns on free movement, nightlife and social gatherings, but they have refrained from a strict stay-at-home order like the one that curbed the first wave of infections but scarred the economy.

POPE APPEARANCE­S

In Italy, Pope Francis is halting his public general audiences and will limit participat­ion at Christmas and other upcoming Masses amid a surge of coronaviru­s cases in Italy and the Vatican, officials said Thursday.

Starting next week, Francis will resume live-streaming his weekly catechism lessons from his library in the Apostolic Palace, as he did during the Vatican’s covid-19 lockdown during the spring and summer, the Vatican said.

In addition, Francis’ liturgical events over the next few weeks and months — including Christmas — will be attended by only limited numbers of faithful, the Vatican said, though it noted plans could change as the health situation evolves.

Ambassador­s to the Vatican were informed recently that Christmas would be essentiall­y a virtual affair for the diplomatic corps this year.

The shift indicated that the Vatican is moving back into partial lockdown mode along with the rest of Italy as Europe experience­s surging covid-19 infections that are putting pressure on already overburden­ed health care systems.

The Vatican City State has not been spared, with 13 Swiss Guards testing positive this month. All told, the Holy See’s official caseload stands at 27, according to the Johns Hopkins University running tally.

In India, the confirmed coronaviru­s caseload surpassed 8 million Thursday with daily infections dipping to the lowest level this week, as concerns grew over a major Hindu festival season and winter setting in.

India’s trajectory is moving toward the worst-hit country, the United States, which has more than 8.8 million cases.

Meanwhile, Taiwan hit 200 days without any domestical­ly transmitte­d cases of covid-19 Thursday, highlighti­ng the island’s continued success at keeping the virus under control even as cases surge in other parts of the world.

Taiwan’s Center for Disease Control last reported a domestic case on April 12. CDC officials noted the milestone and thanked the public for playing a role, while urging people to continue to wear masks and to wash their hands often.

Since the pandemic began, Taiwan has recorded 553 cases of covid-19, and just seven deaths.

Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Stepan Kravchenko and Ilya Arkhipov of Bloomberg News; and by Maria Cheng, Nicole Winfield, Lorne Cook, Samuel Petrequin, Ashok Sharma, Aniruddha Ghosal, Sheikh Saaliq and Frank Jordans of The Associated Press.

 ?? (AP/Lewis Joly) ?? People share a toast Thursday on their last gathering for now on a bar terrace in Paris as France prepared for a new monthlong lockdown, and other European countries considered new measures as coronaviru­s cases soar.
(AP/Lewis Joly) People share a toast Thursday on their last gathering for now on a bar terrace in Paris as France prepared for a new monthlong lockdown, and other European countries considered new measures as coronaviru­s cases soar.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States