- President downplayed severity of virus to avoid ‘panic’
- DHS whistleblower: I was told to stop providing intel on Russian interference
- Biden speaks in Michigan: Trump betrayed the American people
- Fauci calls pausing of vaccine trial ‘unfortunate’
- Justice department seeks to defend Trump in defamation lawsuit
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5.05pm EDT17:05
Today so far
4.11pm EDT16:11
Trump says he ‘perhaps’ misled Americans about coronavirus
4.02pm EDT16:02
Trump on Woodward revelations: ‘I don’t want to create panic’
3.55pm EDT15:55
Trump releases list of potential supreme court nominees
2.55pm EDT14:55
DHS whistleblower: I was told to stop providing intel on Russian election interference
2.10pm EDT14:10
Biden: Trump’s Covid-19 response a ‘life and death betrayal of the American people’
1.45pm EDT13:45
Today so far
5.37pm EDT17:37
5.30pm EDT17:30
The White House coronavirus adviser Anthony Fauci said on Wednesday that AstraZeneca’s decision to pause global trials of its experimental coronavirus vaccine was “unfortunate” – but not an uncommon safety precaution in a vaccine development process.
The UK drugmaker AstraZeneca said on Tuesday it had voluntarily paused trials, including late-stage ones, after an unexplained illness in a participant.
The company said it was working to expedite a review of safety data by an independent committee to minimize any potential impact on the trial timeline.
“This particular candidate from the AstraZeneca company had a serious adverse event, which means you put the rest of the enrollment of individual volunteers on hold until you can work out precisely what went on,” Fauci, the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and the top public health expert on the coronavirus, said in an interview with CBS News on Wednesday morning.
“It’s really one of the safety valves that you have on clinical trials such as this, so it’s unfortunate that it happened,” Fauci added. “Hopefully, they’ll work it out and be able to proceed along with the remainder of the trial but you don’t know. They need to investigate it further.”
The vaccine, which AstraZeneca is developing with the University of Oxford, has been described by the World Health Organization as probably the world’s leading candidate and the most advanced in terms of development.
Ashish Jha, dean of the Brown University school of public health said via Twitter that the significance of the interruption was unclear.
“We have no idea whether this is a big deal or not. Science is hard. This is why we have to let the trials play out. I remain optimistic we will have a vaccine found to be safe and effective in upcoming months,” he said, but cautioned: “Optimism isn’t evidence. Let’s let science drive this process.”
5.05pm EDT17:05
Today so far
Updated
at 5.12pm EDT
4.52pm EDT16:52
Source: US Politics - theguardian.com