COVID-19

Vietnam starts human trial of coronavirus vaccine

Agence France-Presse

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Vietnam starts human trial of coronavirus vaccine

COVID-19 VACCINE. This picture taken and released by the Vietnam News Agency on December 17, 2020, shows Vietnamese military medical officials (L) giving a shot of the COVID-19 vaccine Nanocovax, developed by Vietnamese pharmaceutical firm Nanogen, to a volunteer (R) during the start of human trials at the Military Medical University in Hanoi.

Photo by Vietnam News Agency/AFP

(UPDATED) Nanogen's Nanocovax is 1 of 4 under development in Vietnam, and a company representative says it is expected to cost around $5 a dose

A Vietnamese pharmaceutical company began testing a coronavirus vaccine on volunteers in Hanoi on Thursday, December 17, as developing countries jostle with richer nations to access affordable inoculations.

Nanogen’s Nanocovax is 1 of 4 under development in Vietnam, and a company representative said it is expected to cost around $5 a dose.

Vietnam starts human trial of coronavirus vaccine

Three volunteers received the jab on Thursday and will be monitored for 72 hours at the Vietnam Military Medical University.

Nguyen Ngo Quang from the health ministry said 60 participants will receive the vaccine in the first phase of the trial.

University director Do Quyet said medical personnel were well prepared in case any participants developed problematic side-effects.

“All of us think that COVID-19 is our enemy, so we are preparing for a battle… We have to prepare very carefully and we have to win (this battle),” he told reporters, describing the work on the clinical trial.

Vietnam has won plaudits worldwide for its handling of the pandemic – with just over 1,400 cases and 35 deaths in a country of around 96 million people.

There are concerns that at least a fifth of the world’s population may not have access to a COVID-19 vaccine until 2022, according to a study published Wednesday, December 16.

Wealthy nations – accounting for just 14% of the global population – have pre-ordered just over half of the vaccine doses expected to be produced by the 13 leading developers next year, researchers from the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health found.

Researchers said that Canada had ordered the equivalent of 4 doses per person, the United States has reserved just enough for one vaccine course per person, while countries such as Indonesia have reserved less than one vaccine course for every two people. – Rappler.com

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