Coronavirus: Scientists Make Vaccine Ready As Early As September
Researchers are ready to begin human trials soon with the team working around the clock to develop the vaccine.
A vaccine for COVID-19 could be ready as soon as September, according to a professor from Oxford University.
Sarah Gilbert is a professor of vaccinology and she said that she is “80% confident” that a COVID-19 vaccine to be developed by her team will work.
Her team at Oxford is part of a global effort to find a vaccine for coronavirus which has killed more than 100,000 people around the world, according to Johns Hopkins University.
Professor Gilbert has said that human trials are set to take place within the next fortnight, and that she has been working seven days a week to get a vaccine run through.
She told The Times newspaper: “I think there’s a high chance that it will work based on other things that we have done with this type of vaccine”.
“It’s not just a hunch and as every week goes by we have more data to look at. I would go for 80%, that’s my personal view.”
She added that having something ready by the autumn is “just about possible if everything goes perfectly”, but warned that “nobody can promise it’s going to work”.
The lockdown in the UK could make it more difficult to test the vaccine, as human contact is low, so researchers will have to conduct trials somewhere with a higher rate of transmission, to get a quicker result.
Earlier in the week, researchers at Southampton University said they had discovered that the virus has “low shielding”, meaning a vaccine could be easier to develop.
The UK is at the forefront of vaccine funding, and pumped £210m into an international fund last month – the biggest contribution at the time for a vaccine.
The government has also said that it would be willing to buy millions of doses, should trials prove successful.
However, despite the optimism from Oxford, other vaccine developers have said it could be up to a year before something is ready to distribute.