KV Network

Hope and UK vaccine

Hope and UK vaccine
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The fight against Coronavirus is taking us nowhere. Everyone is concerned about the vast impact the deadly virus has hd and the implications and imprints it has left on every sector.

Be it economy, or other allied sectors people across the globe have felt miserable as crores of jobs have been lost and trade is witnessing a steep slide. Only a selected few countries have managed to put some control on the downslide while as the rest of the world is yet to find a way to tackle the situation.

Though some European and other developed countries may have something to bank on, but people living in countries that are still in the developing stage have been praying for a miracle to happen.

It is in this context that the vaccine that is being developed in various countries can offer some hope for the people as it is almost six months now that the Covid-19 infections have consumed lives across the globe.

Amidst all this despair the UK government says it has now secured access to three different types of COVID-19 vaccines that are being developed in the country and around the world, giving Britain the most likely chance of getting access to a safe and effective vaccine at the quickest speed.

It has also secured access to treatments containing COVID-19 neutralising antibodies from AstraZeneca to protect those who cannot receive vaccines, such as cancer and immunocompromised patients.

As a result of some positive leads England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland could have access to enough doses to vaccinate and protect priority groups identified, such as frontline health and social care workers and those at increased health risk.

The UK government has signed deals for access to around 90 million doses of promising coronavirus vaccines under development.

The three different vaccine classes that the UK government has secured to date include adenoviral vaccines (Oxford University and AstraZeneca), mRNA vaccines (Imperial College London and BioNTech/Pfizer) and inactivated whole virus vaccines (Valneva).

Though it may take some more time for the vaccine to be actually available in Indian and other developing countries but the way the vaccine development is being perused it is hoped that people across the globe can have access to the vaccine and a fight against the deadly virus can be taken to a logical conclusion.

Right now no cure is available to fight this deadly pandemic that had gripped the world and development of a vaccine seems the only option and our response to this deadly virus.


KV Network

Kashmir Vision cover all daily updates for the newspaper

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