- Healthy volunteers in Philadelphia and Kansas City, Missouri, will begin to test an experimental coronavirus vaccine starting this week.
- The small Pennsylvania-based biotech Inovio Pharmaceuticals received regulatory clearance to begin testing. The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, along with other nonprofits, have poured funding into Inovio's vaccine project.
- The biotech expects to have early safety data by late summer and is aiming to produce 1 million doses by the end of 2020.
- Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.
Researchers plan to dose the first person Monday. The experimental vaccine was developed by Inovio Pharmaceuticals, with the effort receiving funding from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations.
Inovio's candidate, called INO-4800, is the second potential coronavirus vaccine to start human trials in the US. The Massachusetts biotech Moderna started dosing in mid-March for its own safety trial.
Anthony Fauci, the longtime leader of the National Institutes of Health's infectious disease unit, has repeatedly stated it will take at least a year to know if any vaccine is safe and effective against the virus.
For the study of Inovio's vaccine, the company is enrolling 40 healthy adult participants in Philadelphia at the University of Pennsylvania's medical school and in Kansas City, Missouri, at the Center for Pharmaceutical Research.
Each volunteer will receive two doses of the vaccine four weeks apart. Inovio expects quick enrollment in the study and safety results by late summer. If those results are positive, the company will quickly start another study focused on assessing the vaccine's efficacy against the virus.
Given unprecedented global demand, any vaccine that proves to be safe and effective will face a major challenge in manufacturing.
Inovio stated it is now scaling up its production capabilities and is aiming to have 1 million doses available by the end of 2020. These doses could be used in additional clinical trials or emergency use, if required.
Slide 1 of 12: More than 128,000 people have now been infected by the coronavirus, and over 4,700 people have died. It is now classed as a pandemic. According to Dr Jenny Harries, England's Deputy Chief Medical Officer, the coronavirus can stay on soft surfaces for 24 hours, and hard surfaces for 48 hours. Here are some things we interact with every day that could easily attract the virus. The solution is not to totally avoid touching things like handrails, elevator buttons, or weights at the gym - but take precautions. Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories. The coronavirus is mainly transmitted by droplets from the bodily fluids of people with the disease. The virus can survive this way on surfaces for a long time - which poses a challenge for everyday life. Scientists still don't think surfaces are the main way the virus spreads, but it is possible to catch the virus by touching a surface with the virus there, then touching your face, according to the US CDC. England's Deputy Chief Medical Officer, Dr Jenny Harries, recently told BBC that the coronavirus can live on soft surfaces for 24 hours, and hard ones for 48 hours. That estimate could prove a low figure: a March 2020 study on other coronaviruses (not the one causing the current pandemic) found that the earlier coronavirus strains could remain active on glass, paper, or metal surfaces, for up to 9 days, the Washington Post reported. Here are the objects to be wary of, and what to do minimize the chance of catching the coronavirus.
- More than 128,000 people have been infected by the coronavirus, and over 4,700 people have died. It is now classed as a pandemic.
- According to Dr. Jenny Harries, England's Deputy Chief Medical Officer, the coronavirus can stay on soft surfaces for 24 hours, and hard surfaces for 48 hours.
- The solution is not to totally avoid touching things like handrails, elevator buttons, or weights at the gym - but take precautions.
England's Deputy Chief Medical Officer, Dr Jenny Harries, recently told BBC that the coronavirus can live on soft surfaces for 24 hours, and hard ones for 48 hours. That estimate could prove a low figure: a March 2020 study on other coronaviruses (not the one causing the current pandemic) found that the earlier coronavirus strains could remain active on glass, paper, or metal surfaces, for up to 9 days, the Washington Post reported.
Likely a minimum of a Year - if that short a time- for a safe and effective vaccine.
There are some useful item bits of info at the end of this article.
DPST's will be very disappointed at anything pointing to an end to their wonderful economic disaster for America.