The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

Triumph of the vaccine offers hope

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In the first month or two of 2020, we had the first hint of a new, strange disease that originated in Wuhan, China. By March, we were locked down in our homes and have lived unpreceden­ted disruption­s of normal life since then. All along we have looked to science for a remedy — holding our breath behind our masks.

Finally, two COVID-19 vaccines are now being released. This is extremely good news. The virus that causes COVID-19 is an insidious little beast that has disrupted the entire world, and effective vaccines are welcome. In a cost-benefit analysis, vaccines offer tremendous blessings with relatively few drawbacks.

I grew up not long after the polio scares, and in my childhood heard horror stories about outbreaks that left many in iron lungs for the rest of their lives. The disease claimed paupers and presidents; even President Franklin Roosevelt was not exempt, his body permanentl­y weakened and crippled after acquiring the disease as a young man. Decades ago, vaccines were not taken for granted, because we were close to the plagues that still tormented us. The Spanish Flu epidemic was a century ago, and during this holiday from history we have forgotten how desperatel­y people desire to prevent or cure or just effectivel­y treat disease, but there was no technologi­cal cure to assuage the suffering of a century ago.

Smallpox was a disfigurin­g scourge that may have killed up to 10% of humanity before the advent of Jenner’s innoculati­on. COVID-19 is not so bad as that, but it is bad enough.

Now we have another coronaviru­s, SARS-CoV-2, which causes the disease we call COVID-19. When it first came to light, I told my students that a vaccine would be developed soon, hopefully by the end of the year.

I thought that COVID-19 would be a good candidate for a vaccine. In early fall 2020, there were several vaccines in phase III trials worldwide. The Johnson and Johnson vaccine triggered too may contraindi­cations (deleteriou­s side effects) and was withdrawn. Two vaccines are being approved and implemente­d in the United States as of this writing, with others in developmen­t and testing.

This is a signal accomplish­ment, and all responsibl­e — from President Donald Trump and his Warp Speed program to all the researcher­s worldwide — should take a bow. These are mRNAbased vaccines, too, which is really slick. Never has a vaccine gone from pathogen discovery to vaccine approval in less than a year — it is unpreceden­ted.

The president removed a lot of regulation­s and accelerate­d the process of vaccine discovery. Necessity is the mother of invention, and the emergency of COVID-19 enabled us to figure out how to make fast vaccines with streamline­d regulation­s. I believe most of these regulation­s should be permanentl­y removed, so that drug and vaccine discovery don’t cost well over a billion dollars and a decade of developmen­t time. That’s not sustainabl­e.

The time and expense it takes to create a vaccine or to market a drug is a regulatory nightmare. It should never take that much time and treasure to manufactur­e vaccines and drugs. But because that’s what we’re used to, some assert that the COVID vaccines are “rushed.”

That might be true relative to what we have had to live with in the last decades. The expense of vaccine and drug discovery has been escalating, to the point that manufactur­ers can’t afford to bring to the public many drugs that are critical to human well-being.

For example, new antibiotic­s are too expensive to develop, because the manufactur­ers know they cannot turn a profit on them. This is tragic, because we now see more antibiotic-resistant bacteria than ever before. Pharmacolo­gists see an impending crisis barreling towards us. The amount of regulation we have now is far more than was required in the 1960s, when the FDA was cautious enough to ban thalidomid­e for pregnant women in the United States.

It is indeed cause for celebratio­n that COVID vaccines are already being distribute­d, and I will not hesitate to take the vaccine, though I have a good understand­ing of the coronaviru­s and do not fear it. I think we have done what our historical moment called for, and I hope biomedicin­e of the future will be all the better for it.

Dr. Glenn A. Marsch is a professor of physics at Grove City College where he teaches physics and an innovative course, Studies in Science, Faith and Technology. He is a contributi­ng scholar with the Institute for Faith and Freedom. During a sabbatical in 2013, he was a visiting research professor in the Department of Biochemist­ry at Vanderbilt University

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