BRUSSELS/COPENHAGEN, May 14 -- As COVID-19 has made more than 1.8 million people sick and caused over 163,000 deaths in the European Region's 54 countries, the European Medicines Agency (EMA) suggested on Thursday that a vaccine for COVID-19 could be ready in a year at the earliest.
While there is a vaccine hope, there is also a vaccine controversy. France has cried foul after the country's pharmaceutical giant Sanofi said it would reserve first shipments of any COVID-19 vaccine for the United States.
Also on Thursday, the World Health Organization (WHO) Regional Office for Europe warned that the "emergency fatigue" would undermine the gains in fighting COVID-19 and that there was "no room for complacency."
An online dashboard, maintained by the WHO European Region, showed that 1,803,789 confirmed COVID-19 cases had been reported in 54 countries in the Region, with 163,458 deaths as of 10:00 a.m. CET (0800 GMT) on Thursday.
VACCINE HOPE & CONTROVERSY
The Amsterdam-based EMA, an agency of the European Union (EU) responsible for the scientific evaluation, supervision and safety monitoring of medicines in the EU, said on Thursday that a vaccine for the novel coronavirus could be ready in a year under an "optimistic" scenario.
"For vaccines, since the development has to start from scratch ... we might look from an optimistic side that in a year from now, so beginning of 2021," Marco Cavaleri, the EMA's head of biological health threats and vaccines strategy, told an online press briefing.
"The ambition is to try to have such vaccines available in a year from now. This might be possible at least for the frontrunners (of vaccine developers)," Cavaleri said.
"These are just forecasts based on what we are seeing and what we expect might happen. But again I have to stress that this is a best-case scenario, (and) we know not all vaccines that enter into development may make it till the end and will come to the authorization," he added.
In France, a vaccine-related controversy made headlines after Sanofi CEO Paul Hudson told U.S. media on Wednesday that "the U.S. government has the right to the largest pre-order because it's invested in taking the risk."
"The declaration of Sanofi boss has upset the President of the Republic (Emmanuel Macron) because this vaccine must be a global public good...The vaccine should be available to everyone at the same time," an official at the Elysee told French media.
"A vaccine against COVID-19 should be a public good for the world. The equal access of all to the virus (vaccine) is non-negotiable," French Prime Minister Edouard Philippe wrote on Tweeter.
Philippe added that Sanofi's chairman Serge Weinberg had given him "all the necessary assurances" with regard to the distribution in France of any potential Sanofi vaccine.
Sanofi is among dozens of drug companies that are currently working on vaccine projects against COVID-19. One of its projects involves a partnership with Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority (BARDA), a U.S. Department of Health and Human Services office for preparedness and response.
NO ROOM FOR COMPLACENCY
"Until a vaccine or treatments are at hand for everyone, limiting the virus requires a partnership of people and policymakers," Dr. Hans Kluge, WHO regional director for Europe, told a virtual press conference from Copenhagen.
It has been 16 weeks since they were notified of the first cases of the novel coronavirus in the European Region, Kluge said.
"Today, in the 39 countries that are easing restrictions in the European Region, our behavior remains as important now as ever before," Kluge said. "There's no room for complacency -- remain vigilant."
"Emergency fatigue threatens the precious gains we have made against this virus. Reports of distrust in authorities and conspiracy thinking are fueling movements against social and physical distancing," he warned.
The WHO official said that the risk across all countries in the European Region remains very high and the east of the European Region is seeing continued rising case counts.
Russia, Britain and Spain remained among the top 10 countries around the world reporting the most cases in the past 24 hours, according to Kluge.
Kluge's cautious assessment came one day after a stern warning from another WHO official that the novel coronavirus may never go away.
"This virus may become just another endemic virus in our communities and this virus may never go away," Dr. Michael Ryan, executive director of the WHO Health Emergencies Program, said on Wednesday at a press conference in Geneva. "It is important that we be realistic and I don't think anyone can predict when or if this disease will disappear."
"We may have a shot at eliminating this virus" with the help of a vaccine, Ryan said, adding that the vaccine must then be "highly effective" and "made available to everyone" and that "we will have to use it."
浙江省2012届高考英语二轮专题总复习课件:第25讲 短文改错
福建省2012届高考英语二轮专题总复习课件:专题2 第6讲 动词及动词短语
福建省2012届高考英语二轮专题总复习课件:专题3 第3讲 夹叙夹议文
浙江省2012届高考英语二轮专题总复习课件:第28讲 应用文
浙江省2012届高考英语二轮专题总复习课件:第6讲 动词和动词短语
福建省2012届高考英语二轮专题总复习课件:专题6 第3讲 图画类
福建省2012届高考英语二轮专题总复习课件:专题2 第12讲 情景交际
浙江省2012届高考英语二轮专题总复习课件:第24讲 任务型阅读
浙江省2012届高考英语二轮专题总复习课件:第19讲 主旨大意题
福建省2012届高考英语二轮专题总复习课件:专题3 第2讲 议论文
福建省2012届高考英语二轮专题总复习课件:专题2 第10讲 复合句(状语从句、定语从句、名词性从句)
浙江省2012届高考英语二轮专题总复习课件:第4讲 介词
浙江省2012届高考英语二轮专题总复习课件:第16讲 语言知识考查
福建省2012届高考英语二轮专题总复习课件:专题1 第1讲 主旨概括题
福建省2012届高考英语二轮专题总复习课件:专题3 第1讲 记叙文
福建省2012届高考英语二轮专题总复习课件:专题1 第2讲 信息提取题
浙江省2012届高考英语二轮专题总复习课件:第5讲 代词
福建省2012届高考英语二轮专题总复习课件:专题2 第4讲 形容词与副词
福建省2012届高考英语二轮专题总复习课件:专题2 第8讲 情态动词和虚拟语气
浙江省2012届高考英语二轮专题总复习课件:第1讲 冠词
浙江省2012届高考英语二轮专题总复习课件:第9讲 情态动词和虚拟语气
浙江省2012届高考英语二轮专题总复习课件:第13讲 特殊句式
浙江省2012届高考英语二轮专题总复习课件:第18讲 细节理解题
福建省2012届高考英语二轮专题总复习课件:专题2 第2讲 名词
浙江省2012届高考英语二轮专题总复习课件:第12讲 状语从句
福建省2012届高考英语二轮专题总复习学案:专题5 短文填词
福建省2012届高考英语二轮专题总复习课件:专题4 第1讲 主旨大意题
福建省2012届高考英语二轮专题总复习课件:专题1 第3讲 推理判断题
福建省2012届高考英语二轮专题总复习课件:专题2 第9讲 非谓语动词
浙江省2012届高考英语二轮专题总复习课件:第15讲 情境知识考查