Who's rushing, bitching: Scientists say that rushing the vaccine can make pandemic worse

The urge to immuneize the populations against Ovid 19s could lead to the spread of a vaccine that is not so effective and that jeopardises the deterioration of pandemic, scientists have said. Politicians and commercial companies are competing to be the first to license the fax, but experts have said the world would be better served if [...]
Politicians and commercial companies are competing to be the first to license faxin, but experts have said the world would be better served if compared results were expected by at least 30 to 50 percent efficiency.
The ministers announced on Friday that the United Kingdom would use emergency powers to push ahead with any potential vaccine through regulatory processes at an unprecedented speed before the end of the year.
Donald Trump, the American president, wants to announce the vaccine before the October 3rd presidential election, Report The Guardian, report to Periscope.
The vaccine is very important in the ban on pandemic, but Professor Sir Richard Petto of Oxford University said that the first vaccine would be purchased and used worldwide even if there were little efficiency.
Even if it protects only a minority of the population, it would be considered the standard by which other vaccines would be measured. That would lead to the approval of inferior vaccines, because they wouldn't have to prove they were better.
I think there's a great hurry, a nationalist and somewhat capitalistic rush as well, to be the first to record the vaccine, and that will actually make it harder to evaluate other vaccines,” said Peto. /Periscope












