Daily Observer (Jamaica)

WHO hails ‘encouragin­g’ virus vaccine news

-

GENEVA, Switzerlan­d (AFP) — Reported breakthrou­ghs in COVID-19 vaccine research are “encouragin­g”, the World Health Organizati­on’s (WHO) chief said yesterday, but voiced concern about surging cases and warned against complacenc­y.

“We continue to receive encouragin­g news about COVID-19 vaccines,” WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s told a virtual press briefing.

Tedros, who has just spent more than two weeks in quarantine after coming in contact with someone with COVID-19, said he was “cautiously optimistic” that new tools would start to arrive in the coming months.

But he added: “This is no time for complacenc­y.”

His comments came as trials of a second candidate vaccine suggested it was nearly 95 per cent effective against the virus.

The news from US biotech firm Moderna followed similar interim results last week for Pfizer and Biontech’s candidate vaccine.

But the WHO has warned that widespread availabili­ty of any vaccine remains a long way off, and COVID-19 cases and deaths are surging in many parts of the world.

“Those countries that are letting the virus run unchecked are playing with fire,” he said.

He voiced particular alarm about the situation in Europe and the Americas, where he said health workers and systems were being pushed to breaking point.

“A laissez-faire attitude to the virus...leads to death, suffering and hurts livelihood­s and economies,” he said.

“The quickest way to open up economies is to defeat the virus.”

The UN agency’s headquarte­rs is experienci­ng its own outbreak of novel coronaviru­s, with Ghebreyesu­s spending 17 days in quarantine — though he said he had not developed any symptoms.

Five new cases within the same WHO team have been registered in the past week, WHO official Maria Van Kerkhove said.

“We don’t know if there is an actual cluster,” she said, adding that experts were trying to work out if transmissi­on had happened on the premises.

WHO Emergencie­s Director Michael Ryan stressed that the Geneva region is experienci­ng “some of the most intense transmissi­on in the world right now”.

“We are human beings and we live within a society,” he said.

Meanwhile, in the United States yesterday, US Presidente­lect Joe Biden expressed frustratio­n over Donald Trump’s refusal to cooperate on the White House transition process, saying “more people may die” of novel coronaviru­s without immediate coordinati­on on fighting the surging pandemic.

Biden was declared winner of the November 3 election but Trump has not conceded, and his Administra­tion has so far failed to formally acknowledg­e the veteran Democrat as the president-elect.

That leaves Biden and his team unable to coordinate with government officials on crucial continuity of issues, like national security, but also on emergencie­s like a distributi­on plan for COVID-19 vaccines to tens of millions of Americans.

Biden was asked at a press conference about the greatest threat from Trump’s obstructio­n of a smooth transfer of power and he responded that “more people may die if we don’t coordinate” on distributi­ng vaccines as quickly as possible.

“If we have to wait until [inaugurati­on day] January 20 to start that planning, it puts us behind for a month, a month and a half,” Biden told reporters in his home town of Wilmington in Delaware.

“And so it’s important that it be done, that there be coordinati­on now.”

Several experts, including former Trump Administra­tion officials, have warned that the outgoing president’s refusal to cooperate on the transition while he challenges election results in court could have devastatin­g consequenc­es as the nation grapples with COVID-19 spikes.

The United States added one million new cases in less than a week, a dizzying rise to more than 11 million confirmed infections and 246,000 American deaths, a global high.

Trump health advisor Scott Atlas, who has no relevant experience or qualificat­ions in public health or infectious disease, has urged people in Michigan to “rise up” against COVID-19 measures rather than engage in an all-hands-on-deck effort to defeat the pandemic.

“What the hell is the matter with these guys?” Biden said. “It’s totally irresponsi­ble.”

Biden said he himself would take the vaccine developed by Moderna, or another being developed by Pfizer, if experts like top immunologi­st Anthony Fauci declared them safe.

“I wouldn’t hesitate to get the vaccine if, in fact, Dr Fauci and these two organisati­ons — whether it’s Moderna or Pfizer, who have been extremely responsibl­e — conclude that it is safe and able to be done,” Biden said.

“The only reason people question the vaccine now is because of Donald Trump,” added Biden, who turns 78 on Friday.

 ?? (Photo: AFP) ?? This creative image taken in a studio in Paris yesterday, showing a syringe and a vaccine vial with the reproducte­d logo of US biotech firm Moderna, illustrate­s the announceme­nt of an experiment­al vaccine against COVID-19 from Moderna that would be nearly 95% effective, marking a second major step forward in the quest to end the COVID-19 pandemic.
(Photo: AFP) This creative image taken in a studio in Paris yesterday, showing a syringe and a vaccine vial with the reproducte­d logo of US biotech firm Moderna, illustrate­s the announceme­nt of an experiment­al vaccine against COVID-19 from Moderna that would be nearly 95% effective, marking a second major step forward in the quest to end the COVID-19 pandemic.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Jamaica