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Merck expects Covid pill to reach rich and poor countries simultaneously

US pharmaceutical giant Merck has vowed to avoid the pitfalls of the global Covid-19 vaccine rollout by ensuring its new anti-coronavirus pill is made available in wealthy and poor countries at almost the same time.

Paul Schaper, the company's executive director of global public policy, told AFP that Merck began working on its access strategy from July 2020, long before the efficacy results of the drug it developed with Ridgeback Biotherapeutics were announced in October 2021.

“We started developing our supply chain very early on,” he said, with the company projecting it will have 10 million courses ready by the end of this year and at least double that figure in 2022.

These, he said, would be priced according to a tiered framework that is based on a country's ability to pay, as defined by World Bank data.


@WebMaster can you please make this in to a sticky thread.
Thanks.
 
Last edited:
Merck expects Covid pill to reach rich and poor countries simultaneously

US pharmaceutical giant Merck has vowed to avoid the pitfalls of the global Covid-19 vaccine rollout by ensuring its new anti-coronavirus pill is made available in wealthy and poor countries at almost the same time.

Paul Schaper, the company's executive director of global public policy, told AFP that Merck began working on its access strategy from July 2020, long before the efficacy results of the drug it developed with Ridgeback Biotherapeutics were announced in October 2021.

“We started developing our supply chain very early on,” he said, with the company projecting it will have 10 million courses ready by the end of this year and at least double that figure in 2022.

These, he said, would be priced according to a tiered framework that is based on a country's ability to pay, as defined by World Bank data.
@WebMaster can you please make this in to a sticky thread.
Thanks.
Seems COVID has created a new vaccine health industry in China and helped upgrade their health companies in the long term. meanwhile before covid they hardly had any presence whatsoever oversees. Interesting





China Is Leveraging Its Vaccine Diplomacy Beyond Covid Shots
Exports of coronavirus shots may lead to sales of inoculations for other diseases such as pneumonia and hepatitis, challenging Western companies.
Bloomberg Businessweek
3 November 2021, 20:00 GMT Updated on 4 November 2021, 05:00 GMT

A Walvax worker with doses of its Covid vaccine.

A Walvax worker with doses of its Covid vaccine.
PHOTOGRAPHER: JIANG QIMING/GETTY IMAGES


The pandemic made China the world’s top exporter of Covid-19 vaccines, mostly to nations that haven’t been able to afford or procure more effective ones from the U.S. and Europe. Now the country is using that newfound leverage to make an aggressive overseas push for its vaccines against other diseases such as Japanese encephalitis and pneumonia, competing with giants including Pfizer Inc. and Merck & Co.
Studies have found the Chinese Covid shots to be less effective than some Western ones, such as the mRNA vaccines from Pfizer and Moderna Inc., and there have been repeated questions about the transparency and data standards of its vaccine makers. Even so, developing nations that have had little access to other coronavirus vaccines are poised to grow more dependent on Chinese companies for shots against other ailments.

The expansion marks a dramatic ascent for China’s pharmaceutical industry and could give poor nations cheaper access to life-saving shots. It will also help President Xi Jinping’s administration wield more soft power globally. Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic has already said Xi may get a statue in the capital of Belgrade for supplying the country with more than 4 million doses of Covid vaccines, supporting local businesses such as the steel industry, and providing geopolitical backing.
China’s state-run Sinopharm is a partner in a sprawling factory being built near Belgrade that Serbian Premier Ana Brnabic says “will be able to make vaccines for other diseases … not only in Serbia, but also for export.” In Morocco, China’s Walvax Biotechnology Co. is selling a vaccine against childhood pneumonia. Other Chinese companies are selling inoculations—for diseases from flu to hepatitis—to places such as Indonesia and Egypt, building on the success of Covid vaccine exports. “China historically has not been a vaccine exporter, so this shift in the midst of the pandemic is one of the ways in which this pandemic has changed the world,” says Thomas Bollyky, director of the global health program at the Council on Foreign Relations. “It has enabled China to be a global player in vaccines in a way it has not before, and I suspect that will stick.”
relates to China Is Leveraging Its Vaccine Diplomacy Beyond Covid Shots

A shipment of Sinovac’s coronavirus vaccines in Phnom Penh, Cambodia.
PHOTO: PHEARUM/GETTY IMAGES
Covid has shown just how quickly the Chinese pharma industry can mobilize. China has exported more than 1.5 billion doses of Covid vaccines across the globe, with Sinovac Biotech Ltd. becoming the world’s No. 1 provider by shipping a total of 1.9 billion doses at home and overseas, topping Pfizer’s 1.5 billion in late September.

That determination is on display at Walvax, which began in 2001 in the southwestern city of Kunming. It started with so little funding that it had to borrow from loan sharks at exorbitant rates to pay salaries. The company went on to participate in government-funded programs to master new vaccine technologies. Today it has a market value of $13.5 billion and sells shots for meningitis, pneumonia, and other diseases in China and overseas.
A couple years ago, Walvax Vice Chairman Huang Zhen became eager to challenge Pfizer’s leadership in pneumococcal vaccines to protect against childhood pneumonia, whose sales bring the New York-based company $5.8 billion in annual revenue. For Walvax, accelerating the trials for its own shot was a costly endeavor. To persuade the company to move more quickly, Huang promised to liquidate his stock in Walvax and cover its expenses of 75 million yuan ($11.7 million) if the vaccine failed.
The company went on to introduce a competitor to Pfizer’s Prevnar 13 in China in 2020. Its shot sells for 598 yuan per dose there, about 15% less than Pfizer’s. The U.S. company has since lost more than 40% of its market share in China for the inoculation, according to government data. Huang predicts similar success for its pneumococcal vaccine in developing nations, where he says it could be an alternative in places unable to secure Prevnar 13. Pfizer declined to comment. Although the company lost market share in China since Walvax introduced its pneumococcal vaccine, volume of Prevnar-13 has still increased 35%, because the market for the shot is getting bigger with new entrants driving more usage of such shots. “In 5 to 10 years’ time, some of the Chinese companies will rise as serious contenders globally,” Huang says. “Covid really shows the potential of Chinese vaccine makers.”
Merck also faces a threat to its blockbuster Gardasil vaccine against the human papillomavirus, which causes cervical cancer. China’s Xiamen Innovax Biotech Co. last year began distributing an HPV vaccine in China. The World Health Organization backed the shot in October, paving the way for it to be registered and purchased across the developing world. Innovax already has an agreement to sell to Thailand. “In terms of quality, I’m confident we are not bad at all,” says Wendy Huang, Innovax’s director of business development. But “it takes time for a Chinese company to become more engaged with the rest of the world.”

The high demand for HPV shots from wealthy countries and the limited supply of approved brands have caused setbacks for the WHO’s goal to eliminate cervical cancer. International organizations such as Gavi—an alliance led by the WHO, the World Bank, the United Nations Children’s Fund (Unicef), and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation to supply vaccines to poor children globally—have already been touting the Innovax vaccine as an option for affordable access. Still, it protects against fewer varieties of HPV than Merck’s shot. Merck in a statement said Gardasil sales haven’t been hurt in China, where demand for the vaccine is high. It said it believes its vaccines bring additional benefits, helping prevent more HPV-related cancers and diseases by covering more HPV types.
Follow the money


Covid shot leader Sinovac is also building a portfolio of vaccines, including some for chicken pox and polio that are being reviewed by the WHO. Sinopharm already sells Japanese encephalitis vaccines in India and Southeast Asian nations. To gain a global footprint for their non-Covid shots, the Chinese companies are often selling them for less than Western brands and seeking “prequalification” from the WHO, a widely recognized guarantee of safety and effectiveness for governments in poor countries. WHO approval also makes drugs eligible for procurement by international organizations such as Gavi and Unicef.
relates to China Is Leveraging Its Vaccine Diplomacy Beyond Covid Shots

Sinovac’s Covid vaccine being administered in Banda Aceh, Indonesia.
PHOTOGRAPHER: CHAIDEER MAHYUDDIN/GETTY IMAGES
For now, China’s main advances are likely to be in low-income countries, meaning its pharma companies will compete mainly with those of low-cost Indian suppliers in the developing world, Bollyky says. Still, questions have persisted over the ability of Chinese Covid vaccines to prevent infections, given their lower efficacy in clinical trials and the number of new cases many countries continue to experience despite mass vaccination. Some nations relying on Chinese vaccines, including Thailand and Brazil, are now turning to more potent mRNA shots developed by Western companies.
Chinese drugmakers and government health authorities have publicized few details about safety issues with the homegrown shots, despite anecdotal evidence of some people suffering severe allergic reactions or dying after receiving them, though it’s unclear whether the inoculations played any role. “One of the concerns that a lot of people have is the lack of transparency around the manufacturing, safety, and efficacy,” says Anna Durbin, professor of international health at Johns Hopkins University’s Bloomberg School of Public Health.

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Sinovac Beijing vaccine factory

Studies have shown the Chinese vaccines to be safe, and Sinovac has repeatedly said its shot has reduced hospitalizations and deaths by more than 80%. But Chinese companies also say the pandemic has taught them vital lessons on managing international trials and following scientific protocols. “We are learning from Pfizer, learning from Moderna, to do everything just as rigorously and along the same standards,” says Walvax’s Huang.
The pandemic has also showed that vaccines can be lifesavers for poor nations, even if they aren’t the most potent ones available. Chinese companies stepped in to provide hundreds of millions of Covid shots to the WHO’s Covax vaccine program for mostly poorer countries when India curbed exports.
“If Africa is a healthier continent and a more prosperous continent because of China,” says Barbara Nattabi, a research fellow at the University of Western Australia’s Africa Research and Engagement Centre, “that gives China a way in.” —Bruce Einhorn and Dong Lyu, with Misha Savic

Read next: Australia Braces for Life After Covid Zero


BOTTOM LINE - Before Covid, China’s vaccines were mostly for domestic use. Now it’s targeting nations using its coronavirus jab for other shots.

 
Covid booster demand surges in France after Macron's speech

Demand for Covid booster jabs jumped in France after President Emmanuel Macron said a top-up dose would be necessary for people to retain their vaccine passes, the country's main appointment booking site said.

“The Macron effect” prompted 149,000 requests for shots, most during and immediately after the president's televised address on Tuesday evening, in which he warned that coronavirus cases were again on the rise, Doctolib said.

Anticipation of the tougher rules had already sparked 96,000 bookings on Monday, compared with an average of 50,000 a day in recent weeks.

A man watches France's President Emmanuel Macron gives an address on television on November 9 at a bar in Bayonne. — AP



A man watches France's President Emmanuel Macron gives an address on television on November 9 at a bar in Bayonne. — AP
 
Germany recommends only Pfizer vaccine for people under 30

Germany's vaccine advisory committee recommends people under 30 be vaccinated only with the Biontech/Pfizer Covid-19 vaccine as it showed a lower number of heart inflammations in younger people than the Moderna vaccination, reports Reuters.

The committee, known as STIKO, has also recommended that pregnant women, independent of their age, be inoculated only with the Biontech/Pfizer vaccine as well.

STIKO based its recommendation on new safety data from the Paul Ehrlich Institute, Germany's authority in charge of vaccines, and new international data.
 
Dutch experts recommend western Europe's first lockdown since summer

An advisory panel of pandemic experts in the Netherlands has recommended imposing western Europe's first partial lockdown since the summer, putting pressure on the government to take drastic and unpopular action to fight a Covid-19 surge, Reuters reports.

Caretaker Prime Minister Mark Rutte's cabinet is expected to take a decision on Friday on new measures following the recommendation of the Outbreak Management Team, a panel of experts, broadcaster NOS reported.

Among measures under consideration are the cancellation of events, closing theatres and cinemas, and earlier closing times for cafes and restaurants, the NOS report said. Schools would remain open.
 
Moderna offers Covid-19 shot at $7 to African Union: Africa CDC head

Moderna Inc has offered to sell its Covid-19 vaccines to the African Union at $7 a shot, according to the head of the Africa Centres for Disease Control John Nkengasong.

Reuters reports the price is half of that paid by the United States earlier in the year. It is also a substantial discount to what other buyers like the European Union have agreed this year, part of a broader trend for drugmakers to sell at lower prices to lower-income countries.

"I am happy to say that a dose of the Moderna vaccine will be $7. That is what is being offered to us," Nkengasong told a weekly virtual media briefing.

Vials with a sticker reading, Covid-19 / Coronavirus vaccine / Injection only and a medical syringe are seen in front of a displayed Moderna logo. — Reuters/File


Vials with a sticker reading, "Covid-19 / Coronavirus vaccine / Injection only" and a medical syringe are seen in front of a displayed Moderna logo. — Reuters
 
Merck and Pfizer announce promising results for their anti-viral drugs, with hopes molnupiravir and paxlovid can cut the risk of serious illness.....

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EU regulator lists new side-effect of J&J Covid-19 shot

Europe's drug regulator has recommended the addition of a rare type of spinal inflammation as a side-effect of Johnson & Johnson's Covid-19 vaccine, Reuters reports.

It is also assessing reports of capillary leak syndrome following inoculation with Moderna's shot.

The European Medicines Agency said currently there is not enough evidence of a possible link between rare cases of multisystem inflammatory syndrome with mRNA vaccines, including Moderna's shot.

Vials with a sticker reading, Covid-19 / Coronavirus vaccine / Injection only and a medical syringe are seen in front of a displayed Johnson & Johnson logo in this illustration. — Reuters/File


Vials with a sticker reading, "Covid-19 / Coronavirus vaccine / Injection only" and a medical syringe are seen in front of a displayed Johnson & Johnson logo in this illustration. — Reuters
 
Germany brings back free Covid-19 tests as leaders warn of bleak situation

Germany will reintroduce free Covid-19 tests from Saturday, according to the country's acting health minister Jens Spahn, as part of measures to hit the brakes on a wave of Covid-19 cases.

The free tests, which were first offered from March as a way to offset a slow vaccine rollout, are being reinstated one month after they were allowed to run out, as the infection rate has hit a record for a fifth day running.

Spahn also said that he supported a stricter requirement that would mean people who are vaccinated and/or recovered must provide a negative coronavirus test to attend public events as well as others.
 
Germany brings back free Covid-19 tests as leaders warn of bleak situation

Germany will reintroduce free Covid-19 tests from Saturday, according to the country's acting health minister Jens Spahn, as part of measures to hit the brakes on a wave of Covid-19 cases.

The free tests, which were first offered from March as a way to offset a slow vaccine rollout, are being reinstated one month after they were allowed to run out, as the infection rate has hit a record for a fifth day running.

Spahn also said that he supported a stricter requirement that would mean people who are vaccinated and/or recovered must provide a negative coronavirus test to attend public events as well as others.

Rapid tests are not accurate. People who are infected but test negative go around spreading fuzzballs.
 
Japan adding more hospital beds in plan for next virus surge

By MARI YAMAGUCHI
today


Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida speaks at a meeting for the COVID-19 measures at the prime minister's office in Tokyo Friday, Nov. 12, 2021. Kishida’s government on Friday adopted a new roadmap of coronavirus measures to better prepare for a next upsurge of the infections, pledging to bolster hospital capacity, following a partial collapse of the healthcare systems in the summer that triggered massive criticisms. (Kyodo News via AP)

Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida speaks at a meeting for the COVID-19 measures at the prime minister's office in Tokyo Friday, Nov. 12, 2021. Kishida’s government on Friday adopted a new roadmap of coronavirus measures to better prepare for a next upsurge of the infections, pledging to bolster hospital capacity, following a partial collapse of the healthcare systems in the summer that triggered massive criticisms. (Kyodo News via AP)


TOKYO (AP) — The Japanese government’s preparations for the next virus surge include adding thousands more hospital beds to avoid a situation like last summer when many COVID-19 patients were forced to stay home, even while dependent on oxygen deliveries.

Even though Japan has a reasonable health insurance system and the world’s largest number of beds per capita, COVID-19 patients were admitted to only a fraction of the beds, mostly at public, university and major private hospitals. The government has provided subsidies to lure more hospitals to treat such patients, but progress is slow, triggering calls for tougher measures in an emergency.

Small private hospitals have been reluctant to accept COVID-19 patients, citing insufficient expertise to handle infectious diseases, lack of staff or the cost. Some prefectures have set up systems where those hospitals would accept patients who are no longer infectious and rehabilitating from serious illness after treatment at bigger hospitals.

Virus measures are key to Prime Minister Fumio Kishida’s weeks-old government maintaining its grip on power after public dissatisfaction with his predecessor’s response — criticized as too little and too slow — precipitated the change in government.

The new roadmap of coronavirus measures, adopted Friday by a meeting of key Cabinet ministers, says the government will have hospitals allocate more beds for COVID-19 treatment by the end of November so that up to 37,000 patients, up from 28,000, can be admitted if infections increase considerably from an earlier wave in the summer.

In mid-August, when new daily cases surged to about 25,000 and health care systems partially collapsed, many patients were unable to find hospital beds and had to get supplemental oxygen and food delivered to their homes. Some died at home.

This prompted the government to set up several medical facilities to accept patients requiring medical attention while waiting for hospital vacancies. Kishida said the government will nearly double the capacity of makeshift hospitals to 3,400, and increase capacity at hotels, where patients with less serious cases can stay, to 61,000 rooms.

“It is important to anticipate a worst-case scenario and take concrete actions to prepare for a next expansion of the infections,” Kishida said at the meeting. “We will promptly secure the medical systems, ensure the process of prevention, detection and early treatment by promoting vaccination, testing and oral pills, in order to reduce the risks of serious cases.”

With nearly 75% of the population fully vaccinated and risks of developing serious cases reduced, more patients are likely to have slight symptoms that won’t require hospitalization, and more attention should go to patients at home, experts say.

“It seems securing hospital beds is overemphasized,” said Koji Wada, a public health professor at the International University of Health and Welfare. “Examples in other countries with vaccination progress suggest patients staying at home are likely to increase, and preparations for that seems lacking.”

The government will have 32,000 primary care doctors and medical institutions monitor or provide medical consultations online for patients at home to address their unease, Kishida said.

Kishida pledged to begin booster shots next month for adults who had been fully vaccinated eight months earlier. The roadmap also pledges the government will secure up to 1.6 million doses of oral medicine to treat COVID-19 and get their approval by the end of this year. The pills are largely for patients with slight symptoms who are expected to stay home, though that would require monitoring by medical staff.

The government aims to gradually expand social and economic activities but is still careful about easing border control for foreign tourism.
 
German leader Merkel says people have duty to get vaccinated

By NICK PERRY
today


German Chancellor Angela Merkel arrives for a debate about the measures to battle the coronavirus and COVID-19 at the parliament Bundestag in Berlin, Germany, Thursday, Nov. 11, 2021. Germany's national disease control center reported a record-high number of more than 50,000 daily coronavirus cases on Thursday as the country's parliament was set to discuss legislation that would provide a new legal framework for coronavirus measures.(Photo/Markus Schreiber)



WELLINGTON, New Zealand (AP) — German Chancellor Angela Merkel said Friday that people have a duty to get vaccinated against the coronavirus to protect others.

She spoke as Germany grapples with a new surge of infections, which reached a record daily high of 50,000 on Thursday.

Merkel talked for 30 minutes with New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern in a free-ranging virtual discussion on the sidelines of the annual Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation forum.

New Zealand is hosting APEC and although Germany is not a member, Ardern said she’s long admired Merkel, who will soon leave office.

“This virus is very, very tough,” Merkel said.

She said it was an enormous scientific achievement to produce vaccines within a year of the outbreak, but that officials still weren’t reaching a group of unvaccinated people.

“You have the right to get vaccinated,” Merkel said. “But, to a certain extent, you also, as a member of society, have the duty to be vaccinated to protect yourself and to protect others.”

About two-thirds of Germany’s 83 million people are fully vaccinated but the nation has resisted making vaccinations mandatory for certain workers. Lawmakers are considering new measures in the face of the latest surge.

During their discussion, both Merkel and Ardern expressed their frustration in the rise of disinformation on social media.

“In the old days, we had certain events that happened in our society. Television reported about it and the next day everyone talked about it,” Merkel said. “Today, everyone participates in his or her own social media. You only engage in a bubble that you meet on the internet.”

If there was any advice she could give to future leaders, Merkel said, it would be to try to understand the perspectives of others and what prompts them to act in they way they do.

Ardern said one of the lessons she’d learned from the pandemic was to get people and companies engaged with trying to find solutions by presenting them with the data and showing them the problem. She said everybody had been learning about the virus as it spread.

“Literally, you’re building the plane whilst trying to fly,” Ardern said.

The APEC forum concludes Saturday with a virtual meeting of Pacific Rim leaders, including U.S. President Joe Biden and Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping.
 
COPENHAGEN, Denmark (AP) — Latvia on Friday banned unvaccinated lawmakers from attending in-person and remote parliament meetings as of Monday when the monthlong lockdown ends. Their wages also will be suspended if they are not able to work at the parliament.

The law, approved by the Saeima assembly in a 62-7 vote with two abstentions and 29 absent lawmakers, requires members of parliament and local government members to be vaccinated against COVID-19.

The Baltic News Service reported that a lawmaker may participate in meetings after they present to the assembly’s Mandate, Ethics and Submissions Committee a certificate confirming that they have been vaccinated against or recovered from the coronavirus, or an opinion of a clinical university hospital specialist recommending postponing vaccination for a certain period of time, together with a negative COVID-19 test.

The law enters into force Nov. 15 and will remain effective until July 1, BNS reported.

Latvian television said 91 of the 100 Saeima’s members have a certificate, as do 696 out of 758 local government members.

Last month, Latvia introduced an 8 p.m.-5 a.m., curfew due to the worsening coronavirus situation in the Baltic country of 1.9 million. Most stores are closed, and indoor and outdoor gatherings, including entertainment, sports and cultural events aren’t allowed. These restrictions end Nov. 15,

Earlier this month, the Latvian assembly authorized employers to dismiss employees who are required to get vaccinated against the coronavirus but refuse to do so.
 
Mauritius imposes new virus curbs as cases jump

The Indian Ocean island paradise of Mauritius imposed a raft of new Covid-19 curbs as it confronted an upsurge in cases despite a high vaccination rate.

Prime Minister Pravind Jugnauth announced the restrictions in a televised address to the nation on Thursday, blaming people who were not abiding by health protocols for the increase in infections.

“The state alone will not be able to contain the spread of Covid-19,” he said.

Mauritius had fully opened its doors to international visitors at the start of October, hoping to rebuild its vital tourism industry after long months of isolation because of the pandemic.


Mauritius reopened fully to international travellers on October 1. — AFP


Mauritius reopened fully to international travellers on October 1. — AFP
 
Merkel urges unvaccinated to reconsider as 7-day Covid incidence rate hits record

German Chancellor Angela Merkel has urged unvaccinated people to reconsider their decision in a video message as the country's seven-day coronavirus incidence rate has risen to the highest level since the pandemic began, Reuters reports.

"Difficult weeks lie ahead of us, and you can see that I am very worried," Merkel said, speaking in her weekly video podcast. "I urgently ask everyone who has not yet been vaccinated: please reconsider."

Germany's seven-day incidence rate — the number of people per 100,000 to be infected over the last week — has risen to 277.4, data from the Robert Koch Institute shows. The record in the third wave of the pandemic last December was 197.6.

Germany's acting Chancellor Angela Merkel gestures as she attends a session of the German lower house of Parliament, Bundestag in Berlin, Germany, November 11. — Reuters


Germany's acting Chancellor Angela Merkel gestures as she attends a session of the German lower house of Parliament, Bundestag in Berlin, Germany, November 11. — Reuters
 
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