Times-Call (Longmont)

Pittsburgh Post-gazette on a vaccine:

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Scientists and researcher­s are racing to satisfy the world’s yearning for a COVID-19 vaccine. Typically, it takes years to accomplish such significan­t medical advances, but the hunt for this vaccine has been expedited the world over. Dozens of vaccines are in various stages of trial or investigat­ion.

As the death toll continues to climb, there was understand­able disappoint­ment when pharmaceut­ical giant Johnson & Johnson announced recently it had halted its ongoing late-stage trials. The interrupti­on stemmed from a participan­t’s unexplaine­d illness.

While a vaccine can’t come quick enough, this kind of caution should inspire reassuranc­e that science and medicine are not sacrificin­g rigor in their quest for a weapon against the deadly virus.

Some worry that the fervent attention being paid to the ongoing COVID-19 trials and any interrupti­ons in their progress could cast the shade of doubt on any vaccine, once one comes.

But, informatio­n is power. And informatio­n about the process, especially when the process and progress are bumpy, should spark public confidence that, ultimately, good science will prevail.

That’s why ultimate transparen­cy in the trial process is critically important.

Astrazenec­a has encountere­d problems in its latestage vaccine trials and, like Johnson & Johnson, has disclosed the interrupti­ons. Both pharmaceut­icals should go further to describe and explain the troubles, even though this is a departure from convention­al protocol. These are not normal times. Even the director of the National Institutes of Health, Francis Collins, has acknowledg­ed that companies should be more forthcomin­g about potential adverse events so public trust in the future outcomes of these extraordin­ary efforts is not threatened.

The most effective vaccine would be rendered useless unless the community is willing to roll up its collective sleeve and take a shot in the arm.

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