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Vaccine race-: Where are Islamic countries?

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The whole world is suffering from Covid-19 and many progressive countries are in the race of inventing Vaccine. Yesterday I was searching about it. There are countries like US, India, China, Israel, England, Japan those who are researching on vaccine, but not even one Islamic country. Why?
Islamic countries have made a organization named OIC on the name of religion, but I have found none of them researching on Vaccine. Do you know why?
NOTE- This thread is for highlighting the Islamic World contribution in Covid-19 research. Don't take it offensive.

Worry about urself, ab kon mar raha hay corona ki maut??? Lolz
By the way, research is going on in Indonesia, Turkey and Pakistan.

By the way, generally speaking this virus have been soft on muslims overall. The most sever hit muslim country is iran, apart from that, Allah have protected muslims.
 
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Yeah we hiding deaths, new cases everything.. while pajeets are winning.


Also means oxford has developed one and we should all be jumping in joy, while indian vaccines are nowhere near even phase 1.
Fascinating at how little Indians want to relate religion to a vaccine? God sake does it matter? In world changing times we should all be pulling in the same direction - not Indian Hindu mindset.
Covid doesn’t look at colour or race or religion - for Indians to try to soft troll using this as a tool shows how low they can stoop. Some of these are indeed the lowest form of human.

Thank Jinnah for creating Pakistan so we can live away from the perverted mindset people like the OP and his brethren.
 
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But i understand that you have missed all of it. Pakistan is now almost Covid free.

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India has a far larger population than any of those, we're still ramping up testing by the day.

https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com...0-lakh-samples-a-day/articleshow/77167075.cms
Pleased to hear it. Personally, I'm not sure of the purpose of this thread. Overall, one could argue that both Pakistan and India have been lucky. Different bits of mismanagement at various stages could have had far worse consequences for both our countries. In healthcare, the basics are the most important things to invest in, pandemic or no pandemic.
 
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It is because international media doesnt report it dude.............

Indonesia targets local COVID-19 strain in Eijkman-led 2022 vaccine initiative
  • Ardila Syakriah
    The Jakarta Post
Jakarta / Tue, May 5, 2020 / 06:41 pm

2020_04_11_92432_1586545860._large.jpg

An illustration shows bottles labeled "Vaccine COVID-19". Several initiatives are underway in the world to develop an effective, tested vaccine for the disease, including a government-funded Indonesian initiative led by the Eijkman Institute for Molecular Biology. (REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration)

Indonesia is looking to fast-track the local development of a COVID-19 vaccine, but concerns remain as to whether insufficient funding and facilities, as well as the country's reliance on imported materials, might hinder the initiative.

The government has appointed the Eijkman Institute for Molecular Biology to spearhead the vaccine development program through a consortium that includes the Health Ministry's Research and Development Agency (Balitbangkes), state-owned pharmaceutical company PT Bio Farma and several universities.

The institute has been given a time frame of just 12 months starting in April, Eijkman director Amin Soebandrio told The Jakarta Post on Sunday.


Vaccines typically require 10-15 years to develop through several stages, including clinical trials and licensing for national immunization programs, according to the United States' CDC.

Eijkman will send any prototype seed viruses it produces – the "seed stock" needed to manufacture vaccines, also called candidate vaccine virus (CVV) – to Bio Farma, the country's sole vaccine manufacturer, for accelerated clinical trials on human volunteers. According to the plan, Bio Farma aims to mass-produce the vaccine by 2022.

This was much faster than the typical five to 12 years needed for vaccine development, said Bio Farma R&D manager Neni Nurainy.

Challenges ahead


Amin said that the target was not impossible, but that the accelerated process would have its own share of challenges, particularly in terms of facilities and funding.

Eijkman has received Rp 5 billion (US$329,989) for the exploratory stage of vaccine development. The sum is part of Rp 90 billion in total funding that the Research and Technology Ministry has budgeted for the consortium's COVID-19 studies.

"If we count everything, [the fund] might not be enough, but we can make use of existing resources and [testing] kits. We are not starting from zero,” Amin said.

Research and Technology Minister Bambang Brodjonegoro said that the funding for Eijkman "will be added to as necessary". He was also well aware that Bio Farma would require large funds to manufacture the vaccine to provide coverage for the country's 260 million people.

Another challenge, Amin said, was that Indonesia still needed to import reagents for the COVID-19 tests at a time when the pandemic had disrupted the global supply chain.

Bio Farma's Neni expressed the same concerns. "There must be support from all parties to accelerate [vaccine] development, [including] funding, raw material procurement, regulations and capable researchers," she said.

Exploratory stage

As coronaviruses mutate easily during replication to adapt to its host, the vaccines developed in other countries might not be viable against the strain in Indonesia, Amin explained.

Eijkman's laboratory has been conducting whole genome sequencing to determine the complete RNA sequence of the SARS-CoV-2 strain in Indonesia. This is part of the initial stage of vaccine development.

Scientists will then be able to detect the antigen of the Indonesian strain and identify the strains in other countries that share the closest genetic traits. In other words, the scientists will trace the chain of transmission of the Indonesian strain.

Given Indonesia's vast archipelagic geography, Amin said that the Eijkman lab would need to collect samples from several regions, which would be a challenge in itself. This would ensure, however, that the CVV it prepared would be suitable for mass-producing a vaccine for immunizing people across the country.

"That's why we have to make [the vaccine] specific [to the Indonesian strain]," he stressed. "Although we can identify the parts of the virus that don't [mutate], the antigen that is discovered might not be good enough for developing into a vaccine."

Many institutions around the world have been sharing their genome sequences of local coronavirus strains with global databases such as GISAID and Nextstrain.

Eijkman on Monday submitted its first three complete genome sequences of the Indonesian strain to GISAID. This was the first submission from Indonesia, although the Health Ministry's lab announced that it was also sequencing the virus early in the outbreak.

Aside from developing a vaccine, genome sequencing can also help with contact tracing. Amin said that the lab was still analyzing the possible origin of the virus strain in Indonesia.

Once the antigen is detected, the Eijkman lab will formulate a vaccine prototype for animal testing with other members in the consortium.

Bio Farma's role

Following successful animal testing, the vaccine seed will then be given to Bio Farma for clinical trials. If the vaccine seed passes the clinical trials, the company will start mass-producing the vaccine.

Neni said it was too early to estimate the amount of vaccine the company would be able to produce by then.

While clinical trials generally took years, said Neni, the final two phases of the clinical trial could be run in parallel to cut time during a health emergency.

Once the safety and efficacy of the vaccine had been proven, the vaccine could be approved for mass distribution under supervision of the Food and Drug Monitoring Agency (BPOM).

Solidary Trial, other options

While there is still a long way to go until a vaccine is available in the country, 22 Indonesian hospitals have joined the World Health Organization (WHO) Solidarity Trial that coordinates clinical trials for potential antiviral treatments.

The program is running comparative trials on four possible treatments: remdesivir, lopinavir and ritonavir, a combined treatment of lopinavir-ritonavir with interferon beta-1a, and chloroquine or hydroxychloroquine.

The WHO and the Health Ministry is providing the untested drug treatments to the enrolled hospitals. The ministry has supplied the treatments to at least eight hospitals by April 23, five of which were ready to recruit volunteers and start randomized clinical trials.

Jakarta's Persahabatan Central General Hospital is among the 22 Solidarity Trial hospitals in Indonesia.

Spokesperson Erlina Burhan said that the hospital had yet to receive the treatments and was still preparing for running the trials. She said that the hospital had been treating COVID-19 patients according to a protocol created by medical organizations.

A copy of the protocol that the Post obtained suggests the use of several drugs for COVID-19 treatment: the antimalarials chloroquine phosphate and hydroxychloroquine, the antiviral oseltamivir (Tamiflu) that has been used to treat bird flu and the experimental antiviral favipiravir (Avigan) that has been used to treat Ebola patients.

Indonesian researchers are also looking at other alternative therapies, including the use of convalescent plasma from recovered COVID-19 patients for treating current patients that have developed a severe form of the disease.

https://www.thejakartapost.com/news...n-in-eijkman-led-2022-vaccine-initiative.html

Latest announcement from Indonesia Covid 19 task force communication officer, Dr Reisa, local vaccine will be ready in the middle of 2021.


Don't worry about OP. Indonesia is a very progressive country, on course to become a second world nation at least in another 5 years time. It will compete with Malaysia and Thailand shortly in all parameters including HDI.

The Indians will be still fighting in the name of religion when that happens.
 
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Chinese told us they are doing work on vaccine and it will be the first one to develop. So don't need to waste resources there, our companies have signed MoUs with Chinese firms who are currently doing phase wise trials.

Meanwhile we are producing our own masks, kits for medical staff and now vents and overall doing much better then pagans.
 
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Don't bother with the stats, i can share a few that will put you to the shame, though it might not affect you that much being a non resident living in a bubble fantasizing things.

We are the foot soldiers in this war, there was one surgeon from your country that complained to me once about the non availability of gloves and masks in the initial days of the pandemic. Few of your own tagged the think-tanks here, conversations were had and the poor bloke has not surfaced since. I hope that some tragedy has not befallen him, and he's genuinely busy in his profession.
 
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Pleased to hear it. Personally, I'm not sure of the purpose of this thread. Overall, one could argue that both Pakistan and India have been lucky. Different bits of mismanagement at various stages could have had far worse consequences for both our countries. In healthcare, the basics are the most important things to invest in, pandemic or no pandemic.

The purpose of this thread is to put down Pakistanis only -- of course, Indians are superior people, and Pakistanis are backward. In case, someone incorrectly quotes me on that, that sentence was intended to mock Bhakts and Sanghis.

It is nice we have civilized order here now and no-one is taking the bait.
 
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Don't bother with the stats, i can share a few that will put you to the shame, though it might not affect you that much being a non resident living in a bubble fantasizing things.

We are the foot soldiers in this war, there was one surgeon from your country that complained to me once about the non availability of gloves and masks in the initial days of the pandemic. Few of your own tagged the think-tanks here, conversations were had and the poor bloke has not surfaced since. I hope that some tragedy has not befallen him, and he's genuinely busy in his profession.
Not bothered about your personal anecdotes. Thanks.
 
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Pleased to hear it. Personally, I'm not sure of the purpose of this thread. Overall, one could argue that both Pakistan and India have been lucky. Different bits of mismanagement at various stages could have had far worse consequences for both our countries. In healthcare, the basics are the most important things to invest in, pandemic or no pandemic.
The purpose of this thread is pretty obvious, glad to see it evolved into at least some what of a discussion on the topic.

I was nicely surprised to see just how fast they're ramping up testing, they're planning to take it up to a million a day. Also, people are, at least where I am, taking good care. Everyone's wearing masks in public places, hands free sanitizer dispensers everywhere + thermal checks almost everywhere. It's not that dangerous to most people anyway, I've heard of 5 or 6 who got it, home quarantine fixed it, no hospitalization needed. Just this one poor guy who's dad died, but then he was aged and diabetic etc so...
 
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