Showing posts with label Covid. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Covid. Show all posts
Egypt authorizes use of Chinese sinopharm vaccine

Egypt authorizes use of Chinese sinopharm vaccine

Coronavirus: Egypt authorizes use of Chinese sinopharm vaccine






The Sinopharm laboratory has announced that its vaccine, to be distributed in China and developing countries, is 79% effective


Egypt has authorized the use of the Covid-19 vaccine developed by The Chinese laboratory Sinopharm, Egyptian Health and Population Minister Hala Zayed announced saturday. After a first batch of vaccines, comprising 50,000 doses and delivered in December, Egypt must receive a second batch of the same amount "the second or third week of January". "And as soon as he arrives we will start vaccination," the minister said on MBC Masr.


The ministry had announced that the first beneficiaries would be members of the medical teams. In total, according to Hala Zayed, Egypt plans to buy 40 million doses of sinopharm vaccine.



A 79% effective vaccine


China's Sinopharm laboratory announced on Wednesday that its vaccine, to be distributed in China and developing countries, is 79% effective. This figure is lower than the US-German Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine (95%) and that of the American biotechnology company Moderna (94.1%). The UK's AstraZeneca, a partner at the University of Oxford, claimed a 70% efficacy rate, but that could be as high as 100% with two doses.


Hala Zayed also announced that a first batch of AstraZeneca vaccines was to arrive "in the third or fourth week of January" and that a contract with the British firm is "in the process of being finalized". In addition, "negotiations are underway with Pfizer," she added.



Source:- Flash News and News Agencies

UK begins injecting AstraZeneca and Oxford vaccine

UK begins injecting AstraZeneca and Oxford vaccine

Coronavirus: UK begins injecting AstraZeneca and Oxford vaccine






British authorities have ordered 100 million doses of AstraZeneca-Oxford vaccine, of which 520,000 are ready on Monday


The Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine has already been injected into more than one million Britons since the launch of the vaccination campaign in early December. On Monday, the UK becomes the first to give its population the vaccine from the British laboratory AstraZeneca and the University of Oxford against Covid-19, while considering a new severe round of screws to curb the worsening of the pandemic.


AstraZeneca-Oxford's vaccine is less expensive, easier to store and therefore more suitable for a large-scale immunization campaign than those of its competitors Moderna and Pfizer-BioNTech, already approved and distributed in several countries, including the United States.


British authorities have ordered 100 million doses of AstraZeneca-Oxford's vaccine, of which 520,000 are ready on Monday, according to the Department of Health. In England, hundreds of new vaccination centres are due to open this week, in addition to the 730 already in place.


"I am delighted today to launch the Oxford vaccine, inherited from British science," Health Minister Matt Hancock said in a statement on Monday. "This is a turning point in our fight against this horrible virus and I hope it will give everyone hope that the end of this pandemic is in sight."


The AstraZeneca-Oxford vaccine was also approved by Argentina as well as India on Sunday, which will allow the country of 1.3 billion people to start one of the world's most massive immunization campaigns. India,where the Covid-19 has claimed more than 150,000 lives, wants to immunize up to 300 million people by mid-2021.



Temperature issue


The AstraZeneca-Oxford vaccine has the advantage of being inexpensive (about 2.50 euros per dose). It can also be stored at the temperature of a refrigerator, unlike Moderna and Pfizer-BioNTech vaccines, which can only be stored at very low temperatures in the long term (-20 degrees Celsius for the first, -70 degrees Celsius for the latter).


However, its authorisation within the European Union is not expected to take place in January, according to the European Medicines Agency (EMA). The United States,for its part, does not plan to approve it until April.


With more than 75,000 deaths, the UK is one of the most bereaved countries in Europe by coronavirus. Nearly 55,000 more people tested positive for the virus in 24 hours, exceeding the 50,000 threshold for the sixth day in a row, according to the latest official data released on Sunday. The rapid expansion of the epidemic, attributed to a new variant of the virus, has led British Prime Minister Boris Johnson to consider stricter restrictions.


"We may have to do things in the coming weeks that will be more difficult in many parts of the country," Boris Johnson told the BBC on Sunday. He added that the closure of schools, a measure taken at the end of March during the first wave of the pandemic, "is one of those things."



Egypt chooses Chinese vaccine


Egypt, the Arab world's most populous country with some 100 million people, has announced that it has approved the vaccine developed by China's Sinopharm. Mexico, meanwhile, reported that more than 20% of the country's health care workers, or about 28,000 people out of 150,000, had already received a first dose of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine.


According to figures published by their manufacturers, Sinopharm's vaccine is 79% effective, Pfizer-BioNTech's 95% and Moderna's 94.1% effective. AstraZeneca-Oxford, for its part, claimed an efficacy rate of 70%, but that could reach 100% with two doses. While the arrival of vaccines gives hope of an improvement at the beginning of the year, the production and supply rates are still far from satisfactory.


The vaccination campaign in the United States is ramping up and could reach one million injections a day, officials said Sunday in the face of criticism of its initial delay, in a country that has just passed the 350,000-dead mark.



Inadequate production


The European Union on Saturday acknowledged a "global shortfall" in vaccine production capacity, saying it was "ready to help" to increase vaccine production capacity. For Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban, however, it is the pace of the EU's acquisition of vaccines that is at issue. Products "were available earlier in Canada, the United Kingdom and Israel," he said on Sunday.


In France, Professor Mehdi Mejdoubi, from the hospital in Valenciennes (north), does not understand "why there is such a gap with Germany: Germany vaccinates 20,000 people a day, we are 50 people vaccinated per day". Since last Sunday, more than 238,000 people (238,809) have been vaccinated in Germany, according to the Robert Koch Institute for Health Watch.


South Africa, also hard hit by the second wave of the pandemic, hopes to get its first vaccines in February but the timing will depend on the outcome of ongoing negotiations with several pharmaceutical companies, the health minister announced on Sunday.


In recent weeks, the South African government has come under fire, including from health experts in the country, for delaying the process of acquiring vaccines against Covid-19. The pandemic has killed at least 1,835,824 people worldwide and more than 84,508,990 cases of infection, according to a report by AFP from official sources on Sunday.



Source:- Flash News and News Agencies

What exactly does the "Covid Vaccine" file provide, which worries the Web?

What exactly does the "Covid Vaccine" file provide, which worries the Web?

What exactly does the "Covid Vaccine" file provide, which worries the Web?






Initiated by the government to monitor the vaccine campaign against coronavirus, the "Covid Vaccine" file raises concerns on social networks. Medical secrecy, personal data.


It will compile the personal data of all persons vaccinated against Covid-19. The "Covid Vaccine" file,under the responsibility of the Ministry of Solidarity and Health and the National Health Insurance Fund (Cnam), was created by decree on 25 December. It is intended to enable "the implementation, monitoring and piloting of the vaccine campaigns against Covid-19," which began on Sunday (December 27th) in France.


This large file, given that it should eventually compile the data of "a large part of the French population", as pointed out by the National Commission for Information Technology and Freedoms (Cnil), raises many concerns on social networks. In a viral post on Twitter, one user denounced the "systematic and non-consensual registration" of patients. According to him, the "Covid Vaccine" file would even violate medical secrecy.



FAKE OFF


"Covid Vaccine" has several concrete aims, set out in the decree of 25 December 2020: to enable the identification of those eligible for vaccination, the sending of vaccination vouchers, the recording of information relating to the pre-vaccination consultation and the organisation of vaccination of these people. The file will also be used to supply the site with vaccines and will allow the patient to be contacted again in the event of a "new risk. This is called "pharmacovigilance." "This treatment is not intended to be extended to other vaccinations than the one against coronavirus," stresses Cnil.


Health workers are thus responsible for registering a set of personal data on the vaccinated persons: identification data (name, first names, date and place of birth...), a plan of affiliation with Medicare, the date and place of vaccination, but also the patient's state of health. The database will also be powered by other existing health files.


The Cnil issued an opinion on the draft decree establishing the "Covid Vaccine" file on 10 December. The body, which is responsible for ensuring the protection of personal data contained in computer files and processings, found that the purposes of the file "appear determined, explained and legitimate."


Some data will be subject to pseudonymization


Contacted by 20 Minutes,the Directorate General of Health (DGS) assures him: "Data processed under the "Covid Vaccine" information system is protected by medical secrecy." For example, processing your personal data does not mean that all health professionals will have access to it. "Only the data needed to carry out the missions at any given time will be accessible to those responsible for carrying out a particular task," Adèle Lutun, a lawyer in the health department at Cnil.


"For example, if you go to a nurse after receiving your vaccination voucher, the nurse will not know what, in your state of health, justifies you getting vaccinated first," the lawyer says. For the exercise of their missions, some professionals will receive data that has been the subject of so-called "pseudonymization" measures, allowing the confidentiality of the identity of individuals. This will be particularly the case for public health france or LRAs.



Will your data be collected without your consent?


Through the connection with other health files, some data will actually be collected in the file from Medicare without the consent of the people. It is this information that will enable the creation and sending of your vaccination voucher when you are among the eligible people. "In practical terms, a person who has received a voucher to be vaccinated and who does not wish to be vaccinated or be included in the information system can ask to be deleted," the DGS said.


"In exceptional circumstances, an exceptional measure, you will not be able to request the erasure of your post-vaccination data," Alain Bensoussan, a lawyer specializing in the right to data protection, told 20 Minutes. This data, which monitors the vaccination campaign and allows for a very high reactivity in the event of the appearance of potentially problematic side effects, are framed by a public interest reason: the protection of the population," he adds. Nevertheless, the DGS stresses that you may object to "the transmission of [your] data for research purposes to the health data platform "Health Data Hub" and the National Health Insurance Fund."



A balance between necessity and proportionality


For Alain Bensoussan, this decree is a balance between "protecting the person and defending his privacy". While he is not concerned about the "Covid Vaccine" file, two points of attention remain, the lawyer points out. First, the need to carefully monitor subcontracting companies that may be required to work with the Ministry of Health and Cnam and which have not yet been detailed by the ministry, despite the recommendation of the Cnil.


Finally, he points out the importance of strengthening the criminal response to illicit data collection: "Today, collecting personal data by fraudulent, unfair or illegal means is punishable by five years' imprisonment and a fine of 300,000 euros. Given the importance of the file and the sensitivity of its data, it would be smart to double that penalty."



Source:- Flash News and News Agencies

Future U.S. Vice President Kamala Harris vaccinated in public

Future U.S. Vice President Kamala Harris vaccinated in public

Coronavirus in the United States: Future U.S. Vice President Kamala Harris vaccinated in public






The United States launched the largest vaccination campaign in its history in mid-December


Kamala Harris received the first of two doses of Moderna's Covid-19vaccine in Washington on Tuesday, calling on all Americans to get vaccinated equally. "I want to encourage everyone to get vaccinated. It's relatively painless. It's going very fast. That's for sure," the future U.S. vice president told the cameras after receiving the injection.


"I barely felt it," added the vice-president-elect behind her green mask at the time of the sting. Kamala Harris was vaccinated at a medical center in a neighborhood with a large African-American population. Proportionately, the latter is particularly affected by the disease,and also very reluctant to vaccinate.



It's about saving your life, the lives of your family members.


"I trust scientists. And it was the scientists who created and approved this vaccine, said the one that has made the fight against the pandemic one of its priorities. So I encourage everyone: when it's your turn, get vaccinated. It's about saving your life, the lives of your family members.


In mid-December, the United States launched the largest vaccination campaign in its history. Democratic President-elect Joe Bidenand Republican Vice President Mike Pence were also vaccinated in public to encourage people to trust the two remedies already approved in the country, the Pfizer/BioNTech alliance and Moderna's.


More than 2.1 million people received an initial injection of one of two licensed vaccines,according to figures from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) on Tuesday. That number is a far cry from the Trump administration's stated goal of promising 20 million people vaccinated by the end of the year.



Source:- Flash News and News Agencies

Spain to keep record of people refusing to be vaccinated

Spain to keep record of people refusing to be vaccinated

Spain to keep record of people refusing to be vaccinated





The number of people wishing to get vaccinated is on the rise in Spain


Spanish authorities will keep a register of people refusing to be vaccinated against Covid-19, which will be shared with other European countries but will not be made public, Spain's health minister said on Monday.


In an interview with the television channel La Sexta, Salvador Illa reiterated that vaccination against coronavirus, which began on Sunday in Spain as in many other EU countries, would not be mandatory.



Lists will be made public


As for those who do not want to be vaccinated, "what we are going to do is a register that will also be shared with other European countries," he continued, adding that he was referring to "the people to whom he has been offered (to be vaccinated) and who will simply refuse it." "This is not a document that will be made public," he said, adding that the file would be developed "with the utmost respect for data protection."


According to the latest study published last Monday by the Centre for Sociological Investigation (CIS), a government-owned polling institute, the proportion of Spaniards who do not want to be vaccinated has dropped dramatically, from 47% in November to 28% in December.


Target 2.5 million Spaniards vaccinated by the end of February


During the same period, the percentage of Spaniards who said they were ready to receive the vaccine increased from 36.8% to 40.5%. Like many European countries, Spain began on Sunday the vaccine vaccination campaign against coronavirus with the vaccine developed by Pfizer and BioNTech.


The government led by the socialist Pedro Sanchez aims to have 2.5 million people -- those in priority or the most vulnerable groups -- vaccinated by the end of February and a total of 15 to 20 million by the summer. With nearly 50,000 deaths and more than 1.8 million cases, according to official figures, Spain is one of the European countries that have been hardest hit by the pandemic.



Source:- Flash News and News Agencies

AstraZeneca says it has 'winning formula' for vaccine ahead of UK decision

AstraZeneca says it has 'winning formula' for vaccine ahead of UK decision

AstraZeneca says it has 'winning formula' for vaccine ahead of UK decision






British pharmaceutical group AstraZeneca said it had found "the winning formula" for its Covid-19 vaccine developed with Oxford University, which the UK regulator is due to rule on in the coming days.


"We think we have found the winning formula and how to achieve efficacy, which, with two doses, is high like that of others," chief executive Pascal Soriot told the Sunday Times,assuring that his vaccine provided "100 percent protection" against severe forms of Covid-19.



Contrasting efficiency


In the interim results of large-scale clinical trials in the United Kingdom and Brazil, the British laboratory announced in November that its vaccine was on average 70% effective compared to more than 90% for Pfizer/BioNTech and Moderna.


Behind this result on average are large differences between two different protocols: the effectiveness is 90% for volunteers who first received half a dose, then a full dose a month later, but only 62% for another group vaccinated with two complete doses.



A vaccine simpler than Pfizer


These results were criticized because the injection of half a dose was due to an error and a relatively small group followed this protocol. The company said at the time that its vaccine required "additional study."


The Oxford/AstraZeneca vaccine is highly anticipated because it is relatively inexpensive and does not need to be kept at a temperature as cold as Pfizer/BioNTech, for example, kept at -70 degrees. This makes it easier to vaccinate on a large scale as well as in nursing homes.



Vaccinate more with several different vaccines


The first Western country to start injecting Pfizer/BioNTech doses in early December, the UK is counting on this second vaccine to ramp up and stop the surge in cases attributed on its soil to a new variant of coronavirus.


Against this mutation, "we believe for the moment that the vaccine should remain effective," said Pascal Soriot. "But we can't be sure so we're going to test it out." He assured that new versions were being prepared in case, while hoping not to need them: "You have to be prepared."


The UK government announced on Wednesday that it had submitted the full data for the Oxford/AstraZeneca vaccine to the UK regulator, MHRA. According to the British press, the latter is due to vote in the next few days for injection from 4 January.



Source:- Flash News and News Agencies

Japan closes borders to non-resident foreigners

Japan closes borders to non-resident foreigners

 Japan closes borders to non-resident foreigners






The measure takes effect on Monday and will last until the end of January


Japan will halt all new arrivals of non-resident foreigners on its territory from Monday until the end of January, authorities announced Saturday as the country reported its first cases of contamination with the new strain of coronavirus.


Japan currently restricts the entry of foreigners from most countries for fear of the virus, requiring all visitors to submit to quarantine upon arrival. Tokyo now plans to strengthen these requirements: Japanese travellers and foreign residents from countries where the new strain of the virus has been reported will have to be tested within 72 hours of their departure and again upon arrival at Japanese airports.


The country will also strengthen quarantine requirements for all travellers returning to Japan.


Fear of the virus variant

Citing the government, Jiji Press and Kyodo said the measure was part of efforts to prevent the spread of a new variant of coronavirus, which is up to 70% more infectious.


Foreign visitors with visas will be allowed to enter, Kyodo said, with the exception of those who have visited the UK or South Africa - two of the countries where the strain has been detected - within two weeks of applying for an entry permit.


Japan's health ministry said on Friday that five people, all from Britain, had been infected with the new strain.


On Saturday, Tokyo reported a record 949 new infections in 24 hours, while the country recently passed the 3,000 daily case mark.

Source:- Flash News and News Agencies

Controversy between France and Germany over Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine

Controversy between France and Germany over Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine

Controversy between France and Germany over Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine






Germany's health minister is said to have pushed for the EU to buy more doses of the vaccine, but France has opposed it. The European Commission and the French government have denied


German magazine Der Spiegel has revealed that germany's health minister has pushed for the EU to buy more doses of Pfizer/BioNTech's Covid vaccine, but France has opposed it.

Clement Beaune, the Secretary of State for European Affairs, denied this.

The European Commission has ordered 300 million doses of the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine.

The first vaccines against Covid-19 are to be administered in the EU on Sunday. The European Medicines Agency and then the European Commission on Tuesday approved the launch of the vaccine from the US-German alliance Pfizer/BioNTech.


The authorization comes amid controversy between France and Germany over vaccine orders. German Health Minister Jens Spahn is reportedly pushing for Europe to acquire more doses of the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine, according to German magazine Der Spiegel. According to the publication, the minister was held back by several countries, including France, on the grounds that the EU had already entered into a contract to obtain 300 million doses of the vaccine developed by the French laboratory Sanofi and the British GSK.



Fake News


"That's not true," Clément Beaune, the French secretary of state for European affairs, said on Monday. "Never has France, Germany, or any country asked to lower the doses of contracts that would have been signed with a particular laboratory."


The European Commission also denied this to the German magazine. The company signed six vaccine supply contracts for Covid-19 this year. It has ordered 200 million doses from Pfizer/BioNTech for all member states, plus an additional 100 million doses. This total of 300 million doses will not be enough to cover the entire EU population, especially since this vaccine requires two injections.


The Commission has also chosen to diversify the vaccine offer, by ordering doses from several laboratories, at the risk of falling behind other countries, such as the United States, which quickly placed an order for 100 million doses from Pfizer and BioNTech.


What also makes Germany cringe, reports Spiegel,is the timing of the signing of these contracts. The one with Pfizer/BioNTech was concluded on November 11, while the one with Sanofi-GSK (the 300 million doses mentioned above) dates back to September 18. Pfizer and BioNTech had released partial results on November 9, announcing 90% efficacy of their vaccine, but did not publish the data in a peer-reviewed scientific journal.



Sanofi-GSK vaccine delayed


The contract with Moderna, a U.S. laboratory that is very advanced in its vaccine trials, was signed on November 25. The Commission has secured the delivery of 80 million doses, with the possibility of ordering an additional 80 million doses.


The vaccine developed by Sanofi-GSK will not be available until the fourth quarter of 2021, the two laboratories said on December 11. It was originally scheduled to be made available "at the beginning of the second half of next year." A postponement that does not call into question, for the time being, the contract signed with the European Commission.



Source:- Flash News and News Agencies

Germany suspends air links with UK

Germany suspends air links with UK

Germany suspends air links with UK







This decision could be adopted by all the countries of the European Union


Germany will suspend all air links with Britain "from midnight" on Sunday following the emergence of a more contagious variant of the Covid-19 virus, the health minister has announced. "From midnight all flights are stopped" for passengers from this country, Jens Spahn said on public television channel ARD.


According to a German government source, this decision could be adopted by all the countries of the European Union. Discussions are under way on this subject and Germany is running the rotating six-month eu presidency until the end of this year. An exception is made for cargo flights carrying cargo.



New threat taken 'very seriously'


At the same time, from Monday "we will restrict all entry" into Germany of British and South African citizens by sea, rail or road, the minister stressed. The details are being finalized on this. The new strain of the virus, believed to be 70% more contagious than the previous one, has been observed in both countries, raising serious fears at a time when the world is already hit by the second wave of the pandemic.


"We take this new threat very seriously" and are examining the consequences at the expert level, especially with the British, of the new variant of the virus, the German minister stressed. "A much faster contagion of the disease would be a game-changer," he said, while Germany is among the European countries most affected by the new wave.



Partial reconfinment


The country is approaching the saturation point in the number of hospital beds in intensive care. A partial refurbishment was ordered this week with the closure of all non-essential shops and schools. The Minister generally called for "no non-essential travel." In Germany, the suspension of air links with Great Britain and South Africa is initially valid until 31 December.


It is only valid until that date because the decision was taken on the basis of a European directive and Britain must leave the EU fully at the end of this year. But Germany will extend it beyond in January and has begun preparations to do so, according to the government source. "We are working on a provision for the period from 1 January," the government source told AFP.



Source:- Flash News and News Agencies

The unit prices of the various Covid-19 vaccines mistakenly published on Twitter

The unit prices of the various Covid-19 vaccines mistakenly published on Twitter

The unit prices of the various Covid-19 vaccines mistakenly published on Twitter





A Belgian minister posted on Twitter the prices, hitherto confidential, of anti-Covid vaccines, causing embarrassment from the European Commission


It's called a big dumpling... A Belgian minister posted on Twitter the prices, hitherto kept confidential, of anti-Covid vaccines, causing embarrassment from the European Commission. Eva De Bleeker posted on her Twitter account on Thursday a table detailing the amounts promised by her government to manufacturers for each of the six vaccines ordered, with the price per unit practiced in the EU.


The Belgian Secretary of State for Budget quickly deleted her tweet but screenshots were seized and the contents were still visible on Friday.



The price per unit ranges from 1.78 to 14.70 euros


Thus, the general public has learned that the price per unit varies from 1.78 euros for the vaccine of the Swedish-British group AstraZeneca, to 18 U.S. dollars (or 14.70 euros) for that of the American Moderna, through that of Pfizer/BioNTech which costs 12 euros. "I wanted to be transparent, maybe a little too transparent," Eva De Bleeker said afterwards, admitting her blunder to Belgian MPs. But this "does not jeopardize" the deliveries of vaccines to Belgium,the Flemish liberal leader assured.


The European Commission on Friday reaffirmed the importance of respecting this "obligation" of discretion. "Anything about information like the price of vaccines is covered by confidentiality, it is a very important obligation," Stefan De Keersmaecker, a spokesman for the EU executive, said at the daily press briefing in Brussels. "This is a contractual requirement" in the context of orders already placed to pharmaceutical groups, said the head of the spokesman, Eric Mamer, noting that they had obtained compliance with this rule all over the world.



Prices "covered by a confidentiality clause"


Disclosure of prices paid in Europe exposes the Commission to difficulties with pharmaceutical companies. Confidentiality "is in the interest of the company (already under contract) but also in the interest of ongoing negotiations with other companies, with other vaccine developers," said Stefan De Keersmaecker. The Pfizer Group did recall that prices were "covered by a confidentiality clause in the contract with the Commission," according to a spokeswoman for Pfizer Benelux contacted by the Belga agency.


On Friday, the Secretary of State's Twitter feed only posted the message on the subject: "Here are the facts: 33.5 million vaccines will be purchased this year for 279 million euros." Another $500 million will be provided, this time from the 2021 budget, for future purchases.



Source:- Flash News and News Agencies