Vaccine makers should plan to adjust COVID-19 jabs - WHO

Christian Lindmeier, speaking at a U.N. briefing in Geneva, said the agency was studying the transmissibility and severity of the variant first detected in southern Africa last month. "It is very recommendable that vaccine manufacturers already start planning ahead and plan for the likelihood for having to adjust the existing vaccine," he said.


Reuters | Updated: 03-12-2021 18:13 IST | Created: 03-12-2021 17:34 IST
Vaccine makers should plan to adjust COVID-19 jabs - WHO
Representative image Image Credit: ANI

Makers of COVID-19 vaccines should gear up for the "likelihood" of needing to adjust their products to protect against the Omicron variant, the World Health Organization's (WHO) spokesperson said on Friday. Christian Lindmeier, speaking at a U.N. briefing in Geneva, said the agency was studying the transmissibility and severity of the variant first detected in southern Africa last month.

"It is very recommendable that vaccine manufacturers already start planning ahead and plan for the likelihood for having to adjust the existing vaccine," he said. "That's good not just to wait until the final alarm bell rings," he said.

Germany's BioNTech should be able to adapt its coronavirus vaccine relatively quickly in response to the emergence of the Omicron variant, its CEO Ugur Sahin told the Reuters Next conference on Friday. South African scientists studying the Omicron outbreak believe symptoms are less severe for those reinfected with COVID-19 by the new variant or infected after vaccination, a top scientist said on Thursday.

Maria van Kerkhove, the WHO's technical lead on COVID-19, said on Wednesday that the body expected to have more information on the transmissibility of the new Omicron variant "within days". "It will still take some time and let's not rush into conclusions here," Lindmeier said on Friday.

"Preliminary data, and we have said that now since awhile, show that there is higher transmissibility. But that's all that we basically have so far," he said. Delta remains the dominant variant globally, accounting for more than 90% of infections, Lindmeier said.

"So Omicron may be on the rise, and we may come to point where it takes over to be the dominant variant, but at this point the very dominant variant remains Delta," he said. "The restrictions that were put into place in many countries just two weeks ago, economic closures again, lockdowns in some areas, closure of Christmas markets in parts of Europe, this was done before Omicron because of a rise in Delta cases.

Let's not lose sight of this," he added.

(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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