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UK AUTHORIZES PFIZER CORONAVIRU­S VACCINE FOR EMERGENCY USE

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British officials authorized a COVID-19 vaccine for emergency use on Wednesday, greenlight­ing the world’s first shot against the virus that’s backed by rigorous science and taking a major step toward eventually ending the pandemic. The go-ahead for the vaccine developed by American drugmaker Pfizer and Germany’s Biontech comes as the virus surges again in the United States and Europe, putting pressure on hospitals and morgues in some places and forcing new rounds of restrictio­ns that have devastated economies.

The Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency, which licenses drugs in the U.K., recommende­d the vaccine could be used after it reviewed the results of clinical trials that showed the vaccine was 95% effective overall

— and that it also offered significan­t protection for older people, among those most at risk of dying from the disease. But the vaccine remains experiment­al while final testing is done.

“Help is on its way,” British Health Secretary Matt Hancock told the BBC, adding that the situation would start to improve in the spring.

“We now have a vaccine. We’re the first country in the world to have one formally clinically authorized but, between now and then, we’ve got to hold on, we’ve got to hold our resolve,” he said.

Other countries aren’t far behind: Regulators in the United States and the European Union also are vetting the Pfizer shot along with a similar vaccine made by competitor Moderna Inc. British regulators also are considerin­g another shot made by Astrazenec­a and

Oxford University.

Hancock said Britain expects to begin receiving the first shipment of 800,000 doses “within days,” and people will begin receiving shots as soon as the National Health Service gets the vaccine. Doses everywhere are scarce, and initial supplies will be rationed until more is manufactur­ed in the first several months of next year. A government committee will release details of vaccinatio­n priorities later Wednesday, but Hancock said nursing home residents, people over 80, and healthcare workers and other care workers will be the first to receive the shot.

Pfizer said it would immediatel­y begin shipping limited supplies to the U.K. — and has been gearing up for even wider distributi­on if given a similar nod by the U.S. Food and Drug

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