Boris Johnson admits that an effective coronavirus vaccine will never be found because he has established a strategy to mitigate the current blockade while protecting the British people. In the preface to the government's new 60-page blueprint entitled "Our Plans for Reconstruction," the Prime Minister said there is no "quick return to normal" and the document does not provide a simple answer.
However, he warned that the "long-term viable solution" to end the coronavirus pandemic is to create an effective vaccine or treatment, which is inevitable. I said no. "We're hoping for great progress, but hope isn't a plan. Vaccines and high-dose treatments could be more than a year ahead. In fact, in the worst case, you won't find a vaccine."
As Covid-19 continues to spread around the world, there was a crazy fight for leaders around the world to find a vaccine that has pledged billions of dollars in funding. Health Secretary Matt Hancock said he is "throwing everything" into the country's efforts to create the Covid-19 vaccine.
Hancock has promised to fund £ 20m for the Oxford project and £ 22.5m for another trial clinical trial at Imperial College London. Hancock wants the UK to first benefit from a vaccine funded through their taxes.
If you want to know more, take a moment and read: Coronavirus, a guide to understanding the virus
In this book you will find everything that is known so far about the coronavirus. How to protect your family and most importantly, what the future holds for us. Because nothing will be the same.
On April 23, a potential coronavirus vaccine developed at Oxford University began trials in humans. A study is currently underway in Oxford and Southampton of up to 510 healthy volunteers aged 18 to 55, with the possibility of adding three additional sites. Scientists working on the vaccine said they could know in 6 weeks if it worked.
Sir John Bell, a regius medicine professor at Oxford University, said that "hundreds" of British had received an experimental jab and hoped to show up in mid-June about whether "signals" would work. Britain only participates with the United States of America, in two studies and China, on starting human trials.
Sir John told told BBC Radio 4 Today: “They vaccinated several hundred people now, and we hope to get some signal about whether it's working by the middle of June.”
Ministers have also announced a new partnership between Oxford University and Astra Zeneca, which aims to ensure that a successful vaccine is rapidly rolled out
Sir John said: “Once we get an approval by the regulators we don't want to have to go back to the beginning and work out how we manufacture it at scale.
"We also want to make sure that the rest of the world will be ready to make this vaccine at scale so that it gets to populations in developing countries, for example, where the need is very great.
If you want to know more, take a moment and read: Coronavirus, a guide to understanding the virus
In this book you will find everything that is known so far about the coronavirus. How to protect your family and most importantly, what the future holds for us. Because nothing will be the same.
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"We really need a partner to do that and that partner has a big job in the UK because our manufacturing capacity in the UK for vaccines isn't where it needs to be, and so we are going to work together with AstraZeneca to improve that considerably."
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