Covid-19
COVID-19 may survive for years to come, vaccine inventor warns
The creator of the world’s first approved vaccine for COVID-19, Ugur Sahin, Chief Executive of Germany’s BioNTech, says he believes the virus may survive for several years to come.
Ugur Sahin’s BioNTech, which partnered with US drug company Pfizer and took less than a year to get a vaccine approved, said the virus will stay with us for the next 10 years, noting that the world needs to get used to the fact there’ll be more outbreaks.
Sahin continued that a “new normal” would not mean countries having to go into lockdown and that scenario could be possible “by the end of the summer”.
“This winter, we will not have an impact on the infection numbers,” he said, “But we must have an impact so that next winter can be the new normal.”
Sahin also urged caution on whether 60-70% of the world’s population being vaccinated would be enough to prevent further outbreaks.
“If the virus becomes more efficient…we might need a higher uptake of the vaccine for life to return to normal.”
It comes as both BioNTech and Moderna are scrambling to test their COVID-19 vaccines against the new fast-spreading variant of the virus that is raging in Britain.
Sahin said he needs another two weeks to know if his vaccine can stop the mutant variant of the virus.
“Scientifically it is highly likely that the immune response by this vaccine can also deal with this virus variant. The vaccine contains more than 1,270 amino acids, and only nine of them are changed (in the mutant virus). That means that 99% of the protein is still the same.”
The mutation known as the B.1.1.7 lineage may be up to 70% more infectious and more of a concern for children.
It has sown chaos in Britain, prompting a wave of travel bans that are disrupting trade with Europe and threatening to further isolate the island country.
But the UK’s chief scientific adviser Patrick Vallance said on Saturday that vaccines appeared to be adequate in generating an immune response to the variant of the coronavirus.
More than 84,000 deaths involving Covid-19 have now occurred in the UK as of Tuesday, new figures show.
Around 500,000 doses of the vaccine have already been administered in the UK and it looks set to be approved in several other countries within weeks.
-
Business6 days agoThe Pros and Cons of Nigeria’s $10bn Surge in Capital Importation
-
Featured2 days agoTwo arrested after England team equipment stolen ahead of World Cup opener
-
Business4 days agoGround handlers suspend services to Max Air over unpaid debts
-
Featured6 days agoNigeria must move beyond zoning, choose leaders based on competence ahead of 2027 – Baba-Ahmed
-
Latest6 days agoKwankwasiyya dismisses reports of Kwankwaso’s exit from NDC
-
Football1 week agoChristian Eriksen stable after collapsing during Denmark–Ukraine friendly
-
Latest5 days agoReps bar first-term lawmakers, block Ugochinyere’s bid for minority leader
-
Aviation4 days agoNSIB recovers black boxes as probe deepens into private jet’s highway landing in Delta

