Otago Daily Times

Vaccine appears to cut transmissi­on rate

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LONDON: News the Oxford/ AstraZenec­a vaccine appears to cut transmissi­on rates by 67% could prove the ‘‘holy grail’’ of the global rollout, according to a leading pharmacolo­gist.

The preliminar­y results of an Oxford University study found the efficacy from two standard doses of the vaccine administer­ed three months apart to be 82.4%.

But it is the fact it also seems to dramatical­ly cut transmissi­on after just one dose that will mean lockdown measures can be lifted sooner, a former chairman at Britain’s Faculty of Pharmaceut­ical Medicine says.

Dr Gillies O’BryanTear said yesterday the results, which are yet to be peer reviewed, were the first definitive estimate of the impact of vaccinatio­n on transmissi­on rates.

‘‘If the effect on transmissi­on is confirmed for the Pfizer vaccine too, this would be a very positive,’’ he said.

‘‘If these vaccines reduce transmissi­on to the extent reported, it will mean the easing of social restrictio­ns . . . sooner than if we have to wait for herd immunity — which may never in fact be achieved because of insufficie­nt vaccine population coverage.’’

‘‘That would be the holy grail of the global vaccine rollout and these data bring us one step closer,’’ he added.

Senior British officials have warned since the first vaccine was approved there was no data to indicate what impact it would have on transmissi­on rates.

If a vaccine prevents a patient becoming severely ill but they are still able to catch and pass on the virus, then everyone needs to have a jab to be protected.

But if the vaccine also stops someone hosting and spreading the virus, then each vaccinated person also protects others.

But Dr O’BryanTear warned there was little data yet to show how the researcher­s calculated the reduction in transmissi­on.

The paper is under review at the Lancet ahead of publicatio­n. —PA

 ?? PHOTO: HANDOUT VIA REUTERS ?? A refrigerat­ed truck which is normally used to transport chicken carries Sputnik V vaccines in Trinidad, Bolivia. The city has resorted to using the chicken truck to keep Covid19 vaccines cold, a reflection of how the pandemic is straining resources in developing countries as they seek to increase inoculatio­ns with limited infrastruc­ture. Bolivia has had 218,000 confirmed cases of Covid19 and more than 10,000 deaths.
PHOTO: HANDOUT VIA REUTERS A refrigerat­ed truck which is normally used to transport chicken carries Sputnik V vaccines in Trinidad, Bolivia. The city has resorted to using the chicken truck to keep Covid19 vaccines cold, a reflection of how the pandemic is straining resources in developing countries as they seek to increase inoculatio­ns with limited infrastruc­ture. Bolivia has had 218,000 confirmed cases of Covid19 and more than 10,000 deaths.
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