Category: Covid-19 Vaccine

Page 302«..1020..301302303304..310320..»

CBP to require proof of COVID-19 vaccination for essential border travel Jan. 22 – Fox 59

December 31, 2021

U.S. citizens and legal permanent residents exempt; business leaders say new rule will have little effect on trade because most truckers vaccinated

by: Julian Resendiz

Cargo trucks lineup to cross to the United States near the US-Mexico border at the Cordova-Americas International Bridge in Ciudad Juarez, Chihuahua state, Mexico, on April 4, 2019. (HERIKA MARTINEZ/AFP via Getty Images)

EL PASO, Texas (Border Report) U.S. authorities on Jan. 22 will begin requiring proof of COVID-19 vaccination from all foreigners entering the country, including those who come here for school, work or to do business. Non-compliance could result in people being turned back.

The federal government on Nov. 8 lifted non-essential land travel restrictions for fully vaccinated foreigners but has continued to exempt essential travelers from the vaccine requirement. This will change next month.

Foreign nationals traveling across the land border for both essential and non-essential reasons will be required to be fully vaccinated.This includes individuals who have previously been crossing the border for essential travel, such as work or medical appointments, U.S. Customs and Border Protection said in a statement.

U.S. citizens and legal permanent residents of the U.S. will not be required to provide proof of vaccination when crossing into the U.S. The requirements also do not apply to those ages 17 and under.

The change might affect enclaves of the U.S.-Mexico border where vaccination rates are low, but its unlikely to cripple international trade in the El Paso, Texas-Juarez, Mexico corridor where rates are high, some observers say.

El Paso County as of Thursday reported a 73.6% full vaccination rate among residents over 5 years old and a 92.5% rate among those 65 and over. Juarez does not post vaccination rates but officials there said more than 80% of their population has been vaccinated.

(Mexican) Truck drivers who go back and forth across the border are considered essential workers and they were never necessarily under the (travel restrictions) ban, said Jerry Pacheco, president and CEO of the Border Industrial Association. Now they have to show proof of the vaccine and I think thats alright. There was ample time for people to get prepared for that, especially the essential workers.

Manufacturers and other U.S.-based companies that do business in Mexico are typically compliant with regulations and likely have already informed their employees about the change coming Jan. 22.

Those workers, either through company programs, their insurance or just (off-site) clinics should have been able to get the vaccine by now, Pacheco said.

U.S. citizens also have had plenty of time to get vaccinated but unlike foreigners the U.S. cant deny them re-entry to their own country, he added.

CBP officials say visa holders can verbally declare compliance with the vaccination requirement to the officer at the port of entry. They should have proof of vaccination ready in case the officer asks for it. CBP says not every individual will be asked to show the document but is required to carry it.

Go here to see the original:

CBP to require proof of COVID-19 vaccination for essential border travel Jan. 22 - Fox 59

What are the symptoms of omicron? Heres how they differ in vaccinated and unvaccinated patients. – The Philadelphia Inquirer

December 31, 2021

The highly contagious omicron variant now accounts for most new COVID-19 cases in the United States. And with a surge in cases and intense demand for scarce at-home rapid tests which dont differentiate among variants Americans experiencing COVID-like symptoms are scrambling to figure out whether theyve contracted omicron, a previous variant, or just a seasonal cold.

Judith ODonnell, the chief of infectious disease at Penn Presbyterian Medical Center, spoke to The Inquirer about the latest surge and how omicron symptoms differ for vaccinated and unvaccinated patients. This interview has been edited for length and clarity.

Were still seeing the usual list of symptoms that we would expect with COVID-19: fever, fatigue, cough, shortness of breath, and then loss of smell and taste. Sometimes congestion, runny nose, sometimes nausea and vomiting and sometimes diarrhea.

I think what we are experiencing, though, is for people who are vaccinated, or vaccinated and boosted, were not seeing as much fever, if any, as opposed to an unvaccinated person.

READ MORE: Booster demand has been up in the Philly suburbs, but many still havent gotten their extra dose

Theres been some reporting in the scientific literature that when patients are vaccinated, or vaccinated and boosted, the symptoms in general are much milder. Theyre more consistent with a typical cold. Theres a lot of talk in the media about getting a lot more runny noses, or congestions. That does seem to be shown in some of the early scientific studies.

Theres the question of are these [milder cold symptoms] related to the variant? Or are they related to the fact that many individuals who are experiencing an infection with omicron are either vaccinated, vaccinated and boosted, or in some parts of the world, like South Africa [where the variant was first identified], theyve already had natural immunity from a prior infection?

It may not be the variant it may just be us, as humans, because we now have immunity to COVID-19 as a virus, and as a result, our bodies have some prior experience with it. So were experiencing the infection more like a common cold.

In the unvaccinated, omicron looks very similar to delta and all the prior variants and the original strain. It can land you in the hospital if youre unvaccinated and can lead to ICU care or death. It should not be taken as its just a cold for everyone, because thats not the case at all.

READ MORE: Should COVID-19 vaccine mandates include a booster shot? | Pro/Con

In an unvaccinated person, omicron is quite capable of and is actually causing pneumonia. People are coming in [the emergency department] with shortness of breath due to pneumonia, just like it has with prior waves and prior variants.

On our PCR testing platform [at Penn Presbyterian], theres a particular testing pattern that is suggestive of omicron the sample would have to be [DNA sequenced] to know that with 100% certainty, but based on that platform, we can say whether a sample is probably omicron.

We have been seeing a lot of omicron in the region. Its really the predominant strain were seeing here in Southeastern Pennsylvania.

Were breaking records every day in the emergency rooms with the volume of visits with people coming in sick, and our hospital inpatient census of COVID cases has risen every day, steadily, over the last week. We have not peaked yet, as far as we can tell.

The patients admitted who require inpatient care are overwhelmingly unvaccinated. There is a small proportion of vaccinated people who are admitted, but by and large, three-quarters at least, if not more, are unvaccinated.

READ MORE: What you need to know about Phillys vaccine mandate for indoor dining

Vaccinated people who have cold symptoms, nasal congestion, runny noses, sore throats, but arent experiencing fever if youre vaccinated and boosted, and those are the symptoms youre having, you may have COVID-19. Its so prevalent across our region that its spreading efficiently and widely.

Id encourage them to try to test themselves. At this point, given youre vaccinated and boosted, this is going to be a mild illness. They should consider this great news, because they did get vaccinated and boosted, and its allowed them to have a COVID-19 infection that is mild. And theyll recover in a week or so, just like with other common cold symptoms.

I encourage everyone to get vaccinated and boosted, if they havent yet.

Read the rest here:

What are the symptoms of omicron? Heres how they differ in vaccinated and unvaccinated patients. - The Philadelphia Inquirer

EU COVID-19 Vaccine and Therapeutics Insights 2021: The Role of Digital Technology in the COVID-19 Battle – ResearchAndMarkets.com – Business Wire

December 31, 2021

DUBLIN--(BUSINESS WIRE)--The "EU COVID-19 Vaccine and Therapeutics Insights, Trends, and Growth Opportunities" report has been added to ResearchAndMarkets.com's offering.

This research service provides critical insights into the European Union and UK COVID-19 vaccine and therapeutics market. The report analyzes COVID-19 vaccines and therapeutics in development and delves into supply chain considerations and requirements to manage distribution. Importantly, the study identifies actionable growth opportunities for industry participants.

Like the United States, the European Union received criticism for vaccine nationalism, but it is taking steps to encourage global vaccine access. It has launched the Team Europe initiative for improving manufacturing and access to vaccines, medicines, and health technologies in Africa.

Initiatives such as the EU Digital Vaccination Passport and UK NHS COVID Pass app will help Europe in safe reopening and overcoming COVID-19 variants of concern to a certain extent. Although vaccinations are progressing at a fast pace, factors that will determine campaigns' future course include political and religious situations, vaccine availability and access, and vaccine hesitancy specifically in younger population groups.

The low vaccination rate in Central and Eastern Europe (CEE) is fueling another COVID-19 surge and causing a healthcare crisis in Bulgaria, Romania and Latvia.

Topics covered include:

Key Topics Covered:

1. Strategic Imperatives

2. Vaccine and Therapeutics Highlights

3. Growth Opportunity Analysis

4. Global COVID-19 Vaccine R&D Landscape

5. Global COVID-19 Therapeutic R&D Landscape

6. Vaccine Manufacturer Strategies to Scale Up Their Global Network

7. EU COVID-19 Vaccination Rollout

8. Role of Digital Technology in the COVID-19 Fight

9. Growth Opportunity Universe

Companies Mentioned

For more information about this report visit https://www.researchandmarkets.com/r/7oqxsz

About ResearchAndMarkets.com

ResearchAndMarkets.com is the world's leading source for international market research reports and market data. We provide you with the latest data on international and regional markets, key industries, the top companies, new products and the latest trends.

Go here to read the rest:

EU COVID-19 Vaccine and Therapeutics Insights 2021: The Role of Digital Technology in the COVID-19 Battle - ResearchAndMarkets.com - Business Wire

Wyoming ranks 50th in percentage of COVID-19 vaccinated residents – County 10

December 31, 2021

(Wyoming) Just over 47% of Wyoming residents are vaccinated for COVID-19 according to the CDCs distribution and administration data tracker.

The group at Beckers Healthcare recently tallied vaccination information from all 50 states plus Washington D.C.

As of December 28th, 2021 Wyoming ranks 50th in percentage of residents vaccinated at 47.4%. The only state with a lower percentage is Idaho.

Vermont, Rhode Island, Maine, Connecticut, and Massachusetts rank as the highest percentage states.

For the full list, click here.

Have a news tip or an awesome photo to share?

Read the original here:

Wyoming ranks 50th in percentage of COVID-19 vaccinated residents - County 10

How omicron is spreading in California counties with different vaccination rates – SFGate

December 31, 2021

Many California counties are reporting high COVID-19 cases as the omicron variant spreads across the state.

The case increase which has led to a tightening of restrictions across the state, cancellations of events and the voluntary closure of some bars and restaurants is unsurprising, given the omicron variant's high transmissibility and because it infects vaccinated people more readily than past strains. In addition, holiday gatherings were widely expected to drive a winter surge regardless of the virus' evolution.

The good news is COVID-19 vaccines are still holding up very well in protecting against severe disease. In San Francisco, where 81% of the population is vaccinated, there's strong evidence of a growing separation between case and hospitalization numbers.

During this summer's delta variant-driven wave, California counties with higher vaccination rates tended to have lower case and test positivity rates, as can be seen in the charts below. Though the vaccination rates listed in both charts are current, they reflect countywide trends in vaccination that emerged before and during the delta surge, as some counties have always had higher rates than others. The analysis is limited to California counties with 100,000 or more residents, and all figures come from the California Department of Public Health.

Although the delta variant caused more breakthrough infections than strains that came before, the clear downward trend line on the test positivity graph suggests vaccines offered significant protection against infection and transmission.

However, in this current omicron wave, that clear downward trend line does not exist.

Counties with higher vaccination rates still generally have lower hospitalization rates than counties with lower vaccination rates, and most experts believe that trend will continue and could grow even more pronounced through the winter. While many counties with better vaccine uptake are now posting higher PCR-confirmed case rates than counties with worse vaccination stats, those numbers probably don't reflect the reality of the situation.

"The more vaccinated counties are likely testing more, and so the lower rates in the less vaccinated counties may be a function of failing to detect cases," UCSF epidemiologist Dr. George Rutherford wrote in an email.

When using the percentage of tests coming back positive which at least partly controls for the amount of testing done there's little association between vaccination rates and transmission levels, indicating that large numbers of vaccinated people are getting infected across the region. But because so many of them will have mild, if any, symptoms, some health experts believe officials should be using hospitalization numbers, not case counts, to set public policy.

You can read more about the risk omicron poses to vaccinated individuals in our story on it.

Follow this link:

How omicron is spreading in California counties with different vaccination rates - SFGate

Lawrence County COVID-19 vaccine tracker: 47% of people fully vaccinated – Ellwood City Ledger

December 28, 2021

Diane Pantaleo, USA TODAY NETWORK| Ellwood City Ledger

Some 47% of people living in Lawrence County are fully vaccinated as of Dec. 21, according to data from Pennsylvania Department of Health.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention considers someone fully vaccinated two weeks after they've been given a single-dose shot (Johnson & Johnson) or a second shot (either Pfizer or Moderna).

Pennsylvania reported 1,904,121 total cases of coronavirus, an increase of 3% from the week before.

The five counties with the highest percentage of their population fully vaccinated in Pennsylvania as of Dec. 21 are Montour County (72%), Forest County (68%), Lehigh County (67%), Chester County (66%) and Lackawanna County (64%).

Here are the latest numbers on COVID-19 vaccinations in Lawrence County as of Dec. 21:

For a county-by-county look at the vaccination rollout, see our COVID-19 vaccine tracker, which is updated daily.

The percentages in this story reflect the total share of the population that has received vaccines. That now includes people as young as 5 years old, for whom vaccines have been authorized.

These weekly stories will be updated as more data on vaccination rates in children, as well as booster vaccination rates, are released.

We pull data on local vaccine distribution on a weekly basis. Check back for our next weekly update mid-week for the latest numbers.

See the original post here:

Lawrence County COVID-19 vaccine tracker: 47% of people fully vaccinated - Ellwood City Ledger

Omicron Hasnt Swayed the Least Vaccinated U.S. Counties – The New York Times

December 28, 2021

A security checkpoint at Denver International Airport on Sunday. While the coronavirus was a major factor in the groundings, bad weather and maintenance issues also caused problems.Credit...David Zalubowski/Associated Press

Flight disruptions in the United States continued on Monday as many people embarked on their first trips in almost two years, and Dr. Anthony S. Fauci, the nations top infectious disease expert, again raised the possibility of a vaccination requirement for air travel.

At least 2,600 more flights were canceled Monday, including about 1,000 U.S. flights, as the highly transmissible Omicron variant of the coronavirus is sending daily caseloads in parts of the United States soaring to levels higher than last winters pandemic peak.

While the cancellations were only a small percentage of overall flights, the problem threatened to extend into the holiday week.

When you make vaccination a requirement, thats another incentive to get more people vaccinated, Dr. Fauci said on MSNBC on Monday. If you want to do that with domestic flights, I think thats something that seriously should be considered.

Over the holiday weekend, airlines canceled thousands of flights as the Omicron variant hit flight crews. In all, about 2,300 U.S. flights were canceled on Saturday and Sunday of Christmas weekend, with more than 3,500 more grounded globally, according to FlightAware, which provides aviation data. On Sunday alone, more than 1,300 U.S. flights and nearly 1,700 additional ones worldwide were canceled.

While some of the groundings were caused by bad weather and maintenance issues, several airlines acknowledged that the current wave of coronavirus cases had contributed significantly. A JetBlue spokesman said the airline had seen an increasing number of sick calls from Omicron.

Twelve percent of JetBlue flights, 6 percent of Delta Air Lines flights, 5 percent of United Airlines flights and 2 percent of American Airlines flights on Sunday were canceled, according to FlightAware.

The stock prices of United, Delta, American and Southwest the four largest U.S. carriers were slightly lower on Monday.

Traveling rebounded sharply this year, making the situation at airports worse: Roughly two million people passed through screening checkpoints each day last week, according to the Transportation Security Administration, and on Sunday. The numbers on Christmas Eve and Christmas Day were much higher than last year, and some figures even exceeded those of the same days two years ago, when virtually no Americans were aware of a virus beginning to circulate halfway around the world.

The Omicron variant, which is now responsible for more than 70 percent of the new coronavirus cases in the United States, has already helped push daily case averages in the United States above 200,000 for the first time in nearly 12 months, according to The New York Timess coronavirus tracker.

An airline trade group has asked the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to shorten the recommended isolation period for fully vaccinated employees who test positive to a maximum of five days, from 10 days, before they can return with a negative test.

Swift and safe adjustments by the C.D.C. would alleviate at least some of the staffing pressures and set up airlines to help millions of travelers returning from their holidays, said Derek Dombrowski, a JetBlue spokesman.

The flight attendants union, however, has argued that reductions in recommended isolation times should be decided on by public health professionals, not airlines.

Some of this weekends delays had little to do with the pandemic. Alaska Airlines had only a few cancellations related to crew exposures to the coronavirus, said a spokeswoman, Alexa Rudin. Yet it canceled 170 flights those two days, according to FlightAware, including 21 percent of its Sunday flights, because of unusually cold and snowy weather in the Pacific Northwest, which affected its hub, Seattle-Tacoma International Airport.

The pandemic has also caused a shortage of train and bus workers nationwide. In New York City, the Metropolitan Transportation Authority is also dealing with an uptick in positive cases among its staff, which is 80 percent vaccinated. It said subway service on Monday was running on a normal schedule, with scattered exceptions.

Whatever we can do as riders to help minimize the risk to transit workers will help to reduce the spread, said Lisa Daglian, the executive director of the Permanent Citizens Advisory Committee to the M.T.A., a watchdog group. The M.T.A. is doing what it can with the resources it has available.

Danny Pearlstein, a spokesman for the Riders Alliance, an advocacy group, said: My sense is the M.T.A. is once again making the best of a bad situation.

Originally posted here:

Omicron Hasnt Swayed the Least Vaccinated U.S. Counties - The New York Times

How to Make COVID-19 Vaccines Available to All: Manufacture the Right Kinds in the Right Places – Foreign Affairs Magazine

December 28, 2021

At first glance, it may seem as if the world will soon have more than enough COVID-19 vaccines. Manufacturers have produced approximately ten billion individual doses since states began approving inoculations in the middle of 2020. Based on current estimates, they are now capable of making 12 billion doses each year. The World Health Organization has approved ten vaccines; multiple countries, such as Russia, have approved several more; and plenty of additional vaccines are still in development.

This scale-up in productionfrom zero to ten billion in less than one and a half yearsis a remarkable feat, one never seen before in biological manufacturing. But as impressive as this accomplishment is, it will still be insufficient. The first reason for this is well known: dose allocation across countries is extraordinarily uneven. Over 70 percent of the COVID-19 vaccines produced in 2021 were bought by high- and upper-middle-income countries. Less than one percent, by contrast, have gone to low-income ones. The results speak for themselves. Some rich countries, such as Portugal, have fully vaccinated close to or more than 80 percent of their residents. Meanwhile, many poor countries, including Nigeria, have vaccinated less than two percent of their people.

But it is not just a problem of aggregate distribution. The world may appear to have lots of vaccines, but only 27 percent of them are messenger RNA (mRNA) shots, which train the body to make the protein that allows COVID-19 to infect cells and then the antibodies that fight it off. And so far, these are the vaccines that appear able to prevent people from becoming sick with the new, very contagious Omicron variant. These more effective and adaptable vaccines are even more concentrated in rich states than are shots overall.

Omicrons rapid and sudden emergence highlights the uncertainties in the pandemics trajectory. It is possible that the world will need another round of vaccines, further straining supply and encouraging high-income countries to continue stockpiling doses. To prevent such an outcome, wealthy countries, multilateral development banks, and global health agencies will need to expand mRNA manufacturing in regions and countries that have little to no capacity. Doing that would increase overall supply and make it more difficult for a small collection of nations to hoard most doses. It would help distribute mRNA vaccines around the world, lowering prices and making shots more accessible to everyone. And in the long term, more dispersed manufacturing could help countries produce non-COVID-19 inoculations, protecting the world against other diseasesand better preparing it for the next pandemic.

Of all the COVID-19 vaccines delivered in the United States, the overwhelming majorityroughly 95 percentare mRNA vaccines: Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna. It is a statistic that stands in sharp contrast to the rest of the planet. Globally, over 43 percent of the COVID-19 vaccines produced in 2021 were made by Sinopharm and Sinovac using inactivated viruses. Nearly a quarter were produced by the University of Oxford-AstraZeneca, relying on viral vectors. Pfizer-BioNTech vaccines, an outright majority of all U.S. supplies, make up just over 20 percent of the worlds arsenal. Moderna, over a third of what the United States has received, constitutes a little over 5 percent of the planets production.

There is nothing inherently wrong with having large supplies of non-mRNA vaccines, which all do a good job of preventing severe disease and death. States should certainly take and distribute these doses if they are the ones they can quickest access. But unfortunately, studies in the lab and in the real world on the Beta, Gamma, and Delta variants showed that both viral vector vaccines and inactivated virus vaccines are not as effective as Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna. As a result, many countries that previously administered Sinopharm, Sinovac, and Oxford-AstraZeneca have switched to mRNA shots for boosters.

If early results on the efficacy of shots against Omicron hold true in larger studies, there will be even an even stronger demand for mRNA vaccines around the world. But many countries will struggle to gain access to these shots. Right now, almost all mRNA vaccines are manufactured in Europe and the United States. For vaccine production as a whole, capacity is highly concentrated in China, the European Union, India, the United Kingdom, and the United States. The clustering of manufacturing creates a series of challenges. It provides vaccine-producing states, for instance, with undue international influence by giving them the power to use vaccines as a tool of trade and diplomacy. It also means that if countries with large production facilities institute export restrictions so they can vaccinate their own residents first, as India did in March 2021, countries without manufacturing networks may find themselves paralyzed.

Only 27 percent of the worlds vaccines are made with mRNA.

To make distribution more equitable, companies must build mRNA vaccine production sites around the world. They should focus especially on Africa and Latin Americatwo regions that have mostly been excluded from COVID-19 vaccine manufacturing (and vaccine supply chains generally). Manufacturers should, in particular, add production capacity in small states, such as Costa Rica, Panama, Rwanda, Senegal, and Singapore. Greater dispersion would help minimize the costs of vaccine nationalism. Even if these countries offered doses for their own populations before exporting to others, they would fulfill their domestic needs relatively quickly.

Thankfully, vaccine makersincluding mRNA manufacturersare taking steps to build capacity in such places. Pfizer-BioNTech has announced manufacturing partnerships in Argentina, Rwanda, and South Africa. Moderna has announced plans to build a facility in Africa, although the location and other details are not yet available. Johnson & Johnson and Oxford-AstraZeneca already have set up multiple manufacturing sites globally. Singapore has attracted a slate of vaccine manufacturing investments in the last 18 months, including from Pfizer-BioNTech, Merck, and Sanofi. Gennova, an Indian company, has set up its own domestic manufacturing plant and is developing an mRNA vaccine.

But right now, these factories wont come online fast enough to meet the expected demand for variant-tailored doses. To speed up the process, the G-20 countries should provide new vaccine production sites with financing and technical help. They should also facilitate the flow of equipment and critical raw materials. Finally, major economies must push manufacturers to build more such facilities, offering assistance if needed.

Much is uncertain about the future of the pandemic, including what new variants might emerge, how effective different types of vaccines will be against them, and whether companies will be able to produce new, custom-tailored vaccines in response. But in most future scenarios, the world will need more manufacturing capacity for mRNA vaccines, which (in theory) are much simpler to adapt and reformulate than the competition. In the coming months, countries should also consider establishing plants for protein-based COVID-19 vaccines, the first of whichproduced by Novavaxwas just approved by the European Union and the World Health Organization. Protein-based shots cannot be retooled as quickly as mRNA vaccines, and it is unclear if they will be as effective against new variants. But like mRNA vaccines, protein-based shots use production systems that are simpler than those deployed by viral vector shots. Unlike mRNA vaccines, protein-based shots are not technologically new; the worlds manufacturers have more required technical experience and capacity for production.

Yet to build manufacturing sites that will be useful in the long term, it isnt enough for countries to build facilities that can produce the kinds of shots needed right now. Companies and governments must construct manufacturing sites that are themselves flexible, so that they can easily switch from making one vaccine to another. The goal is for facilities to be able to quickly start producing different kinds of COVID-19 shots or even move from making COVID-19 vaccines to routine immunizations. Sanofis proposed production facility in Singapore offers one possible template. The site would have digital infrastructure and equipment capabilities that allow for quick changeovers, thereby enabling the site to toggle between three or four different types of vaccines. The proposed mRNA site in Rwanda would be a highly modular manufacturing unit, which should shorten the construction period and make it easier to reconfigure individual components if and when needed.

Vaccine manufacturing is a complex task, and it will take time to get new sites running.

Adaptability has its downsides. Flexible facilities could have higher operating and capital expenses compared with dedicated plants that produce extremely large volumes of one product. Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance; the World Bank; and the other multilateral institutions that finance vaccinationssuch as the Asian Development Bankwill need to accept slightly higher prices from these new manufacturing sites as a premium for resilience and flexibility. Wealthy countries should also consider offering large, low-interest loans and grants to new facilities so that they can be cost competitive from the start. In the long term, flexible sites may actually have financial and risk advantages over single-use sites, since they can more easily adjust to the worlds needs.

It will take time to get the new sites running. Vaccine manufacturing is a complex task that requires the right equipment, workforce, quality-control systems, and inputs. The learning curve for mRNA manufacturing sites, which employ new technologies, will be especially steep. But recent contract manufacturers for Moderna and Pfizer-BioNTech were able to set up secondary sites in six to eight months, showing that with the right incentives and resources, building new facilities is achievable within a reasonable time frame. The United States and other G-20 countries could help expedite the process by having their biologics-manufacturing scientists to provide technical assistance and by offering financial support. The U.S. International Development Finance Corporation and the International Finance Corporation have already made some investments in additional manufacturing in India, Senegal, and South Africa. These efforts should be expanded and accelerated to bolster production capacity for currently approved mRNA vaccines, second-generation mRNA vaccines, and protein-based vaccines.

Unequal vaccination coverage cannot be magically fixed by creating more equitable manufacturing capacity. To tackle this problem, governments, international institutions, and businesses must take concerted action to improve vaccine deployment, cold chain capacity, and the supply of ancillary goods, such as syringes. National and community leaders will need to combat misinformation and encourage hesitant residents to actually get shots. But by expanding and diversifying vaccine-manufacturing capacity, the world could increase vaccine supply and improve distribution, better safeguarding the planet from infections. The wealthiest countries and companies have a responsibility to help the world as it moves through the Greek alphabet of COVID-19 variants and as it contends with whatever illnesses come next.

Loading...Please enable JavaScript for this site to function properly.

More here:

How to Make COVID-19 Vaccines Available to All: Manufacture the Right Kinds in the Right Places - Foreign Affairs Magazine

Novavax’s stock rallies after its COVID-19 vaccine is granted EUA in India – MarketWatch

December 28, 2021

Shares of Novavax Inc. NVAX, +1.73% hiked up 2.9% in morning trading Tuesday, after the Maryland-based biotechnology company and vaccine manufacture Serum Institute of India Pvt. Ltd. said Novavax's protein-based COVID-19 vaccine, Covovax, has been granted Emergency Use Authorization (EUA) in India by the Drugs Controller General of India. The vaccine will be made and marketed in India by Serum. Novavax's vaccine has previously received EUA in Indonesia and the Philippines, has received Emergency Use Listing with the World Health Organization and has been granted Conditional Marketing Authorization by the European Commission under the name Nuvaxovid. Novavax expects to submit a complete package to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for its vaccine by the end of the year. "The approval of Covovax in India marks a significant milestone in strengthening our immunization efforts across India and LMICs [low-to-middle-income countries]," said Serum Chief Executive Adar Poonawalla. "We are proud to deliver a protein-based COVID-19 vaccine, based on Phase 3 clinical data demonstrating more than 90% efficacy and a favorable safety profile, to our nation." Novavax's stock has shed 20.7% over the past three months, while the iShares Biotechnology ETF IBB, -0.34% has lost 5.1% and the S&P 500 SPX, +0.07% has gained 10.3%.

Originally posted here:

Novavax's stock rallies after its COVID-19 vaccine is granted EUA in India - MarketWatch

Page 302«..1020..301302303304..310320..»