Amitabha ! India will save us all.

syed putra

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TOP URGENT GAME CHANGER : INDIA HAS DEVELOPED NASAL SPRAY COVID19 VACCINE, NO NEED INJECTION, SELF ADMINISTERED NO NEED MEDICAL PERSONNEL, ONE DOSE ONLY.

Here is the latest news.
India has developed a nasal spray Covid 19 vaccine.
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India is not only the world's largest manufacturer of ALL TYPES of vaccines but India is also the world's largest manufacturer of Covid19 vaccines.
Plus many Western pharmaceutical companies are 'contract manufacturing' their Covid19 vaccines in India.
I have blogged this before and am repeating it here again - lets get the Covid19 vaccines from India. They are the cheapest at below US10 per dose.
We should also talk to India now about this nasal spray Covid19 vaccine. It does not require any injection, it is self administered and does not require medical personnel and it only requires ONE dose.
 
We don't need vaccines. However, India can supply us with cheap HCQ.

EU99BTZUcAEwZ0z.jpg
 
Empty vessel makes the most noise.
Fucking Indians and their worthless shit.

Fuck India
 
Ah nehs don't even trust ah neh vaccine

Indian state rejects Bharat Biotech COVID-19 vaccine approved without efficacy data
FILE PHOTO: COVID-19 vaccination in New Delhi
Indian Health Minister Harsh Vardhan holds a dose of Bharat Biotech's COVID-19 vaccine called COVAXIN during a vaccination campaign at All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) hospital in New Delhi on Jan 16, 2021. (File photo: Reuters/Adnan Abidi)
11 Feb 2021 08:38PM
(Updated: 11 Feb 2021 08:42PM)
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NEW DELHI: The opposition-ruled Indian state of Chhattisgarh said on Thursday (Feb 11) that it had asked the federal government to halt the supply of a homegrown COVID-19 vaccine until its efficacy could be proven in an ongoing late-stage trial.

India, which has reported the world's second-highest number of COVID-19 cases after the United States, has vaccinated more than 7 million front-line workers since Jan 16 using COVAXIN, developed by Bharat Biotech, as well as a vaccine licensed from AstraZeneca and Oxford University.

So far, the federal government has ordered 10 million COVAXIN doses and 21 million AstraZeneca shots, locally made by the Serum Institute of India for low- and middle-income countries.

Bharat Biotech, which created COVAXIN with the state-run Indian Council of Medical Research, has said efficacy data from the late-stage clinical trial on nearly 26,000 volunteers will be out by next month, leading to criticism from epidemiologists that it was approved too hastily for emergency use.

The developers and India's drug regulator, however, say the vaccine is safe and effective based on early and intermediate studies.

READ: Indian army drills dog squad to sniff out COVID-19
Chhattisgarh, a central-eastern state of about 32 million people, said it was likely to be soon sent COVAXIN shots after starting its campaign with 588,000 doses of the AstraZeneca product.

"There's an inhibition/concern among the community in general regarding the use of COVAXIN," state health minister TS Singh Deo wrote in a letter to his federal counterpart, Harsh Vardhan, and shared on Twitter.

"This concern arises from the fact that the clinical trials of phase 3 are yet to be completed."

Singh Deo also said on Twitter that COVAXIN vials do not display any expiry date and that he had requested Vardhan to halt its supply to Chhattisgarh "until these issues are addressed to the satisfaction of our Health Department to avoid the wastage of the early expiration doses of the drug".

A spokeswoman for the federal Ministry of Health and Family Welfare did not respond to a request for comment.

Bharat Biotech said it might comment later. It plans to export the shot to Brazil and the United Arab Emirates soon.

India's COVID-19 infections rose by 12,923 in the past 24 hours to 10.87 million in total. Deaths increased by 108 to 155,360.
 
Covid: What is the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine?
Published
4 days ago
A member of the vaccine team prepares a syringe with a dose of the AstraZeneca/Oxford Covid-19 vaccine, at an NHS Scotland vaccination centre set up at the Edinburgh International Conference Centre (EICC) in Edinburgh on February 1, 2021.
IMAGE COPYRIGHT GETTY IMAGES
People have been urged not to delay getting the Oxford vaccine, despite concerns that it might be less effective against the South Africa Covid variant.

Early findings from South Africa suggest the vaccine may need updating to be a better match for some emerging new variants of coronavirus. This could be true for other coronavirus vaccines too.

However, the government's deputy chief medical officer, Jonathan Van Tam, says the "immediate threat" is from the UK or Kent variant and there is "plenty of evidence" the vaccines are effective against that.

Does the vaccine protect against new variants?
The South Africa study, based on about 2,000 young people who had the vaccine, suggests the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine offers limited protection against mild and moderate disease caused by the South Africa variant.

There is no evidence to suggest it would not be effective at preventing more severe cases that need hospital treatment.

In the UK, 147 cases of the South Africa variant have been identified and measures are being introduced to try to limit its spread.

There is no sign that the South Africa variant will become dominant in the UK, the government's deputy chief medical officer, Jonathan Van Tam, has said. The "immediate threat" is from the UK or Kent variant and there is "plenty of evidence" the vaccine is effective against that, Prof Van Tam added.

Research carried out in the UK found a single dose offered 76% effective protection for three months. The vaccine is given as two doses to provide the best protection.

UK scientists are working on new versions of the vaccine, to keep up with a virus that will inevitably keep mutating.

How does the Oxford vaccine work?
It is made from a weakened version of a common cold virus (known as an adenovirus) from chimpanzees. It has been modified to look more like coronavirus - although it can't cause illness.

Once injected, it teaches the body's immune system how to fight the real virus, should it need to.

Research has shown it is highly effective. No one given the vaccine in trials developed severe Covid or needed hospital treatment.

Unlike Pfizer's jab - which has to be kept at an extremely cold temperature (-70C) - the Oxford vaccine can be stored in a normal fridge. This makes it much easier to distribute.

Graphic: How does the Oxford vaccine work
Why are some other countries limiting their use of this vaccine?
South Africa has paused roll-out while it does more investigations on vaccines and the variant dominant there.

Germany, Austria and France are using the vaccine but are only offering it to 18-64 year olds, because there is limited data on how well it protects the over-65s.

AstraZeneca says its trial data suggests it works among over 65s. Earlier studies show older people, as well as younger people, appear to have an equally strong immune response to the vaccine.

The European Medicines Agency approved the vaccine in January for use in all age groups, including older adults.

Is the Oxford vaccine as good as the Pfizer?
Large trials showed the Pfizer vaccine was 95% effective, while the figure for the Oxford one was 62%.

But directly comparing results is difficult because there are differences in the way the trials were carried out.

And it's important to remember that even the lower 62% figure is a better result than the best flu jab, which is about 50% effective.

No-one who received the Oxford vaccine was hospitalised or became seriously ill due to Covid.

A recent study found a single dose of the Oxford vaccine offered 76% protection for three months, and this went up to 82% after the second dose.

How long do vaccines protect against Covid for?
It is not yet known how long protection lasts with any of the coronavirus vaccines.

A separate study found unvaccinated people are protected after catching coronavirus for at least six months. Vaccines are likely to provide stronger protection than this.

It may be that people need annual vaccinations, as happens with the flu jab.

Which vaccine will I get?
You will not be given a choice about which vaccine you get.

In the UK, recommendations on which groups get the vaccine are made by the Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunology.

Vaccine timeline shows when priority groups are predicted to get their vaccines
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