Western Mail

Second Covid vaccine in USA ready for shipment

- ASSOCIATED PRESS REPORTERS newsdesk@walesonlin­e.co.uk

WORKERS in the US began packaging shipments of the second Covid-19 vaccine to be authorised in the country in a boost to efforts to bring the coronaviru­s pandemic under control.

Employees at a factory in the Memphis area were boxing up the vaccine developed by Moderna and the National Institutes of Health.

The jabs are expected to be administer­ed from today, just three days after the Food and Drug Administra­tion authorised their emergency rollout.

Yesterday, an expert committee was due to debate who should be next in line for early doses of the Moderna vaccine and a similar one from Pfizer and Germany’s BioNTech.

Pfizer’s shots were first shipped out a week ago and started being used the next day, kicking off the nation’s biggest vaccinatio­n drive.

Public health experts say the vaccine – and others in the pipeline – are the only way to stop the virus spreading.

Nationwide, more than 219,000 people per day on average test positive for the virus, which has killed more than 314,000 in the US and nearly 1.7 million worldwide.

The Pfizer and Moderna shots shipped so far and going out over the next few weeks are nearly all going to healthcare workers and residents of long-term care homes, based on the advice of the Advisory Committee on Immunisati­on Practices.

That panel was due to meet yesterday to debate who should get the doses available after those early jabs are administer­ed.

There will not be enough shots for the general population until spring, so doses will be rationed at least for the next several months.

The panel members were leaning towards putting “essential workers” next in line, because people like bus drivers, grocery store clerks and others are the ones getting infected most often.

But other experts say people aged 65 and older should be next, along with people with certain medical conditions, because those are the Americans who are dying at the highest rates.

The expert panel’s advice is almost always endorsed by the US Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

But no matter what the CDC says, there will be difference­s from state to state, because their health department­s have different ideas about who should be closer to the front of the line.

Both the new Moderna vaccine and the Pfizer-BioNTech shot require two doses several weeks apart. The second dose must be from the same company as the first.

Both vaccines appear safe and strongly protective in large, still unfinished studies.

Meanwhile, president-elect Joe Biden’s nominee for US surgeon general, Vivek Murthy, said that it was more realistic to think it may be mid-summer or early autumn before coronaviru­s vaccines were available to the general population in the United States, rather than late spring.

 ??  ?? Boxes containing the Moderna vaccine are prepared to be shipped at the McKesson distributi­on centre in Olive Branch, Mississipp­i
Boxes containing the Moderna vaccine are prepared to be shipped at the McKesson distributi­on centre in Olive Branch, Mississipp­i

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