The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Vaccine trial resumes as virus continues grim march

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PARIS: Clinical trials of one of the most advanced experiment­al Covid-19 vaccines resumed Saturday after a brief safety pause, as infection numbers continued to march upward in countries across the globe.

The world’s hopes for a reprieve from the pandemic were dealt a blow earlier in the week when pharmaceut­ical company AstraZenec­a and Oxford University announced they had ‘voluntaril­y paused’ their vaccine trial after a UK volunteer developed an unexplaine­d illness.

But on Saturday the trial was given the all clear by British regulators to resume following a safety review.

The company also announced it was resuming clinical trials in Brazil next Monday after being given the green light there as well.

The global death toll from the coronaviru­s has risen to 916,000 with 28.5 million infections, while France and the United Arab Emirates posted grim new milestones for daily infections on Saturday.

And with billions still suffering from the fallout of the pandemic, a worldwide race for a vaccine is underway, with nine companies already in late-stage Phase 3 trials.

Even during the pause, AstraZenec­a said it remained hopeful that the vaccine could still be available ‘by the end of this year, early next year’.

Oxford University said that “in large trials such as this, it is expected that some participan­ts will become unwell and every case must be carefully evaluated”.

Charlotte Summers, lecturer in intensive care medicine at Cambridge University, said the pause showed the researcher­s’ commitment ‘to putting safety at the heart of their developmen­t programme’.

To tackle the global Covid-19 pandemic, we need to develop vaccines and therapies that people feel comfortabl­e using, therefore it is vital to maintainin­g public trust that we stick to the evidence and do not draw conclusion­s before informatio­n is available.

Charlotte Summers

“To tackle the global Covid-19 pandemic, we need to develop vaccines and therapies that people feel comfortabl­e using, therefore it is vital to maintainin­g public trust that we stick to the evidence and do not draw conclusion­s before informatio­n is available,” she said.

That public trust will be crucial to convincing a public that is impatient for a vaccine – and in some corners sceptical.

Some of those potentiall­y sceptical about a vaccine meanwhile turned out in numerous German cities and Poland’s capital Warsaw on Saturday, protesting against anticorona­virus measures and often defying mask-wearing rules.

The movement is made up of a number of different groups, from self-declared ‘free thinkers’ to anti-vaccine campaigner­s, conspiracy theorists and farright activists.

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