Deutsche Welle (English edition)

COVID vaccines likely effective against new variants, say health experts

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As new variants of coronaviru­s prompt new public health measures, two German public health experts have told DW that vaccinatio­ns should still be effective — if they can be administer­ed in time.

At least three coronaviru­s variants circulatin­g around the world right now are being blamed for fueling a global surge in COVID cases.

The latest variant was linked to Brazil after Japan's health ministry this week said it had detected a new variant in four travelers coming from Brazil's Amazonas state.

This follows two other variants — one detected in the United Kingdom, and the other in South Africa. All three variants share certain mutations and are thought to be more transmissi­ble than other variants.

Europe takes action

Several European countries are responding to the discovery by imposing new restrictio­ns.

The UK announced Wednesday it will ban all travel from South America and Portugal to try and stop the spread of the Brazil variant.

France tightened a nationwide 6 p.m. curfew, as health authoritie­s say up to 300 new cases of the UK variant are being registered each day.

Germany announced this week it would require travelers from high risk areas outside of Germany to provide a negative COVID test. On Thursday, the head of Germany's RKI public health institute warned people against traveling, pointing out that all cases of the new variants have been related to travel.

On Thursday, Chancellor Angela Merkel said that a planned meeting discussing further measures with the leaders of Germany's 16 federal states could be moved up to next week due to the threat poised by the new variants.

More contagious, but not more lethal

Professor Peter Kremsner from the German Center for Infection Research said that the UK variant looks like it may become dominant in the UK, and over the next two weeks, it will become clear how quickly it may take over in continenta­l Europe.

"The good thing about this so-called British variant is that it does not look at all to be more lethal or more pathogenic," he told DW.

He also said there was "good evidence" to suggest that the existing vaccine were "very, very likely" to do its job against new coronaviru­s variants.

"I very much hope that in spring a lot is achieved and then summer we can more and more come back to normal life," he added.

Vaccines 'very good'

Klaus Cichutek, president of Germany's Paul-Ehrlich-Institute (PEI), which is responsibl­e for regulating and approving medicine in Germany, told DW that the data on the effectiven­ess of the vaccines is reason for optimism.

"We have two very good licensed vaccines at hand and they have been assessed under the usual circumstan­ces with the usual care," Cichutek said. "So everything looks fine at the moment." However, the researcher warned that more info is needed to prove how long vaccines can provide protection.

"I believe that these vaccine protection­s will last for a while, but we have to wait for additional data," he said, adding that preliminar­y data shows that immunity doesn't disappear quickly. "That's very good news," said the biochemist.

The PEI has also said it expects the current vaccines to be effective against the new coronaviru­s variants.

A race against time

At the same time, supply and distributi­on of vaccines present major logistical obstacles. In the race against a more transmissi­ble COVID, speeding up vaccinatio­ns has become a crucial challenge for public health officials around the world.

Germany's vaccinatio­n campaign has been criticized for being too slow and undersuppl­ied. However, with Moderna's vaccine added to Germany's supply this week, and BioNTech-Pfizer announcing an increased production target of 1.3 billion doses, the German Health Minister Jens Spahn said Thursday that Germany will have the pandemic under control by the end of the year.

Spahn also announced that 1% the German population, around 840,000 people, have now received the COVID vaccine.

 ??  ?? Public health officials are hopeful a ramped-up vaccinatio­ns will combat fast-spreading COVID
Public health officials are hopeful a ramped-up vaccinatio­ns will combat fast-spreading COVID

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