Posted By

Tags

Protectionism could prevent the global spread of Covid-19 vaccine

Alvin Powell
Harvard Business School, USA
May 8, 2020

Photo by Volodymyr Hryshchenko on Unsplash

 

One of the most popular, and highest-stakes, guessing games to emerge from the Coronavirus pandemic is how long it will take to get a vaccine.

A Harvard infectious disease expert said on Thursday (May 7, 2020) that how far we are from a vaccine will likely depend on who is asking.

“The question is: ‘Who is ‘we?’” said Barry Bloom, the Joan L and Julius H Jacobson Research Professor of Public Health and former dean of the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health.

If “we” are healthy volunteers willing to be inoculated to see whether an experimental vaccine works, the answer is that some are already getting it, and more will be enrolled in the coming months.

Barry Bloom, Former Dean, Harvard Chan School. (Harvard File Photo by Kris Snibbe)

Once an effective solution emerges, hopefully by early next year, it may take another six to eight months to reach priority populations like US health care workers and first responders.

Other essential workers, including those toiling for low wages in grocery stores and food production, should not be forgotten, Bloom said.

For still others, particularly those in developing nations, the answer is considerably different.

“If ‘we’ is a person in Burkina Faso, or Laos, and [they are] expecting to see a vaccine in the next three years, I would be very surprised [if they see it],” said Bloom, who spoke during a Facebook Live event sponsored by The Forum at Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health and PRI’s “The World.”

Increasing Nationalism

Complicating the already-tense global Covid picture, Bloom said, has been an increase in nationalism in the US and elsewhere, which is at odds with equitable distribution of scientific gains against the SARS-CoV-2 virus and global health goals.

The Trump administration, for instance, skipped a meeting of global leaders late last month called to get them to commit to distribute any future vaccine in an equitable way and declined this week to attend a fundraising conference by the European Union to coordinate vaccine efforts.

The head of one of the world’s largest vaccine processing operations in India said in a recent media report that any vaccine it produces will go to protect India’s population before doses are sent abroad.

Professor Yonatan Grad (Harvard File Photo by Kris Snibbe)

US-China tensions

Further, increased tension between the US and China over the virus’ origins threatens the free flow of scientific information, marked early on by Chinese researchers sharing the viral genome in the pandemic’s opening weeks.

That spirit of cooperation has been key to the rapid international scientific response to the outbreak, one that has nonetheless been outpaced by the virus’ spread.

Scientists have been sharing information about the virus and the illness it causes nearly as quickly as the data has become available, Bloom said, flooding the traditional scientific journals with new information and prompting the publication of unreviewed work on preprint servers and even in scientists’ Twitter posts.

“I have not seen anything like this in my entire career. This is moving at lightning speed. Not everything you read is going to turn out to be correct, but at least the information is being shared,” Bloom said.

Developing treatments

Development of treatments is moving on a parallel track, Bloom said, and the recent findings that the drug remdesivir is effective in lessening illness severity is promising.

Bloom pointed out that optimism has to be tempered by the fact that several of those given the drug died and that the virus could still be found in the bodies of those treated.

Still, he said, most of those tested were seriously ill, and some believe that giving the drug to patients earlier in the course of their illness may make an even more significant impact.

Public health officials have underscored that remdesivir is a treatment, not a cure, and it is possible that its greatest importance may be as a proof of concept that will lead to better therapies.

Until effective treatments or vaccines are widely available, the predominant tools for government leaders will remain social distancing, personal protective equipment, and other measures already in use. Yonatan Grad, the Melvin J and Geraldine L Glimcher, Assistant Professor of Immunology and Infectious Diseases, said on Thursday (May 7, 2020) that as more localities and states begin to relax social-distancing requirements, it is important that we begin to think about what to do when infections resurge, as is expected.

Grad said that very little thought is being given to what the re-imposition of controls will look like, even though they may not necessarily mirror current practices.

Targeted controls

That is because, he said, a lot has been learned about what works and what does not.

He said that it is likely that controls could be more targeted and less the “blunt instrument” that widespread social distancing has been during the initial response.

“Can we use more refined measures? Can we combine social distancing of varying kinds with contact tracing, as well as quarantine and isolation?” Grad asked.

“Trying to balance the types of interventions we have available to us with the context in which we’re seeing a resurgence is going to be critical. … I think that’s an extremely important question, and one that I have not seen well addressed.”

Grad, who spoke to the media during a morning conference call, also called into question the idea of issuing immunity “passports” to people who have already been sick or who test positive using antibody tests.

Aside from the potential for inequitable use of the passports, Grad said that the available tests, many of which were allowed on the market without review, are prone to false positives, particularly in places where there have been relatively few COVID cases.

What that means, he said, is that people who think that they are immune and are back at work and out in the community may be susceptible to getting the virus.

Instead of contributing to herd immunity, they may contribute to the virus’ spread.

Inaccurate tests could also further muddy our understanding of whether infection confers immunity at all, since someone with a false-positive result who subsequently gets sick may reasonably wonder whether getting the illness provides any protection at all.

“You could be in a situation where … you are actually introducing into the population people who you think are positive, but enough of them are actually negative that you could be below the herd-immunity threshold,” Grad said.

Alvin Powell is Harvard Staff Writer at the Harvard Gazette. The above article appeared in Harvard Gazette of the Harvard Business School, USA.

Share this story

Related Stories

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Indian Newslink

Previous slide
Next slide

Advertisement

Previous slide
Next slide

Advertisement

Previous slide
Next slide

Advertisement

Previous slide
Next slide

Advertisement

Previous slide
Next slide

Advertisement

Advertisement

Previous slide
Next slide

Advertisement

Previous slide
Next slide

Advertisement

Previous slide
Next slide

Advertisement