US Pfizer Covid vaccine approved for emergency use

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The US Food and Drug Administration has authorised the Pfizer-BioNTech coronavirus vaccine for emergency use.

The agency said the authorisation was a “significant milestone” in the pandemic, which taken more than 295,000 lives in the US.

The vaccine, which offers up to 95% protection against Covid-19, was deemed safe and effective by the FDA.

President Donald Trump said ”the first vaccinations will take place “in less than 24 hours”.

“Today our nation has achieved a medical miracle…We have delivered a safe and effective vaccine in just nine months,” Mr Trump said.

Before the announcement on Friday night, the FDA had come under intense pressure from the Trump administration to approve the vaccine’s use.

The head of the agency, Stephen Hahn, was told to approve it for emergency use by Friday or quit, US media reported, although he called this “untrue”.

Health and Human Services Secretary, Alex Azar, told reporters earlier on Friday that his department would work with Pfizer to get the mass vaccination programme started by Monday or Tuesday.

The Pfizer vaccine has already received regulatory approval in the UK, Canada, Bahrain and Saudi Arabia. Like those countries, the US will give its first doses of the vaccine to the elderly, health workers and emergency crew.

Coronavirus deaths have been rising sharply since November in the US. On Wednesday, the country recorded more than 3,000 deaths, the highest total in a single day anywhere in the world.

“The FDA’s authorisation for emergency use of the first Covid-19 vaccine is a significant milestone in battling this devastating pandemic that has affected so many families in the United States and around the world,” Mr Hahn said.

He said the authorisation came after “an open and transparent review process” that ensured the vaccine met the “FDA’s rigorous, scientific standards for safety, effectiveness, and manufacturing quality”.

On Thursday, medical experts advising the FDA recommended the emergency-use authorisation. A 23-member panel concluded the vaccine’s benefits outweighed its risks.

Emergency use, the FDA said, is not the same as full approval, which would require Pfizer to file a separate application to secure.

“While not an FDA approval, today’s emergency use authorisation of the Pfizer-BioNTech Covid-19 Vaccine holds the promise to alter the course of this pandemic in the United States,” the Director of the FDA’s Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research, Peter Marks said.

On Friday, President Trump sent out an angry tweet calling the FDA a “big, old, slow turtle”, adding: “Get the dam vaccines out NOW, Dr Hahn. Stop playing games and start saving lives.”

The Washington Post said that White House chief of staff Mark Meadows had ordered Mr Hahn to approve the vaccine on Friday or submit his resignation, citing three sources. But Mr Hahn told US media he had only been “encouraged to continue working expeditiously” on the vaccine’s approval, and that the media representation of the chief of staff’s phone call was “untrue”.

Amid the reports of White House pressure, President-elect Joe Biden said ”he wanted to make it clear to the public that they should have confidence in the vaccine, adding: “There is no political influence.”

The Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine was the first coronavirus jab to show promising results in the latter stages of its testing process.

It is a new type called an mRNA vaccine that uses a tiny fragment of genetic code from the pandemic virus to teach the body how to fight Covid-19 and build immunity.

“The vaccine contains a small piece of the [Covid-19] virus’s mRNA that instructs cells in the body to make the virus’s distinctive ‘spike’ protein.

“When a person receives this vaccine, their body produces copies of the spike protein, which does not cause disease, but triggers the immune system to learn to react defensively, producing an immune response against [Covid-19],” the FDA said.

The vaccine is given as two injections, 21 days apart, with the second dose being a booster. Immunity begins to kick in after the first dose but reaches its full effect seven days after the second dose.

Operation Warp Speed says that vaccine deliveries will begin within 24 hours of approval.

“We have made sure that this vaccine will be free, for all Americans,” Mr Trump said in a recorded video posted to Twitter.

“We have already begun shipping the vaccine to every state and zip code in the country. The first vaccine will be administered in less than 24 hours,” the President sstated.

Pfizer plans to have 6.4 million doses ready for the US in its first rollout round in late December.

Because two injections are required per person, that is enough for three million people, out of a total US population of 330 million.

 

 

BBC/Mercy Chukwudiebere

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