China vaccines put to real-world test against Covid-19
- Studies of vaccinated populations in Chile and Brazil show Sinovac can reduce deaths, counter variants
- Efficacy rates are lower than mRNA shots but experts say that means more people will need to receive vaccinations to achieve herd immunity.
Almost a billion doses of Covid-19 vaccines have now been administered, according to Bloomberg, providing scientists with critical feedback on how the jabs work in the real world, especially as global daily infections move toward record highs and new variants of the virus spread.
In Chile and Brazil, studies of vaccinated populations are shedding light on a vaccine from China, after varied results from its clinical trials led observers to wonder how well it would work in protecting large numbers of people from the disease.
The first large-scale, real-world study of the Sinovac Biotech inactivated vaccine – developed using the virus with its disease-producing capacity removed – found that, while it falls short of the effectiveness of vaccines using cutting edge mRNA technology, it significantly reduces deaths and symptomatic cases.
Jerome Kim, director general of the International Vaccine Institute in Seoul, said clinical trials were limited to measuring how well a vaccine worked in an individual but could not examine its ability to stem the disease’s spread at a population level, where more factors were at play. Tracking real world data on a new vaccine “gets to a question of effectiveness … does it work in countries that have achieved certain levels of protection?” he said.
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