Pages

Wednesday 26 January 2022

China has rejected the world’s top mRNA vaccines. Now, it’s making its own

Until now, China has rejected the world's most effective and popular COVID-19 vaccine technology ...


Until now, China has rejected the world's most effective and popular COVID-19 vaccine technology—mRNA jabs—and has instead relied on traditional, inactivated vaccines to achieve its 86.6% fully vaccinated rate. But inactivated vaccines are less effective against Omicron and, analysts suspect, China's exclusive use of the old tech is the primary reason why China's borders remain mostly sealed to the outside world.

But this week a Chinese pharmaceutical company announced it is getting closer to developing a homegrown mRNA vaccine, which may prove a critical step in Beijing accepting the technology, providing a much-needed immunity boost to its 1.4 billion population, and finally reopening its borders.

On Monday, Chinese vaccine maker Walvax Biotech published Phase I clinical data on China’s first homegrown mRNA vaccine showing that the vaccine induced an immune response. Walvax is jointly developing the vaccine with private vaccine maker Suzhou Abogen Biosciences and the Chinese military’s Academy of Military Science, and published the peer-reviewed study in The Lancet medical journal.

In the study, Walvax gave six different groups of 20 people two jabs 28 days apart. One group received a placebo, while the other groups received differing doses—5, 10, 15, 20, or 25 micrograms—of the vaccine to gauge the intensity of immune responses.

The results showed the mRNA jab has an efficacy between 80% and 95%, which is on par with the mRNA vaccine developed by Pfizer and BioNTech—but Bloomberg Intelligence analyst Mia He says those early figures don't tell the whole story.

For one, He told Bloomberg, the Walvax vaccine appears to be more effective in generating antibodies than actually catching the virus when administered in certain concentrations. That finding suggests that unless dosing is extremely precise, getting the jab may not provide more protection than getting COVID-19. Other mRNA vaccines, like BioNTech's, don't have that problem.

Plus, the Walvax vaccine appears to cause more side effects, such as fevers, than Pfizer’s or Moderna’s shots do. But the study remains the first clinical proof that China may have a viable homegrown mRNA jab to distribute to its population.

Chinese authorities, meanwhile, appear to have iced out the country's other mRNA option: the BioNTech jab.

Since March 2020, China’s Fosun Pharma has partnered with Germany’s BioNTech to market and distribute the proven and highly effective mRNA jab in the Chinese market. (Pfizer, which struck an agreement with BioNTech after Fosun did, controls distribution rights to BioNTech’s vaccine in most other countries.)

Fosun Pharma has already distributed jabs to places where it controls distribution rights, including Hong Kong, Macau, and Taiwan, and has reportedly built manufacturing facilities to produce the mRNA vaccine in mainland China.

But Beijing has yet to approve the vaccine for distribution in mainland China, despite BioNTech's mRNA shot being more effective than the inactivated vaccines from makers like Sinopharm and Sinovac that China is currently distributing to its citizens.

Last July, when Walvax's drug was still in development, the company's director of research development, Dr. Tong Xin, told Fortune he was optimistic that an mRNA jab would eventually launch in China because "the vaccine technology has been proved effective." But Walvax still has a long way to go before it can bring its drug to market.

Walvax reports it is currently conducting Phase III clinical trial for its vaccine in Mexico and Indonesia, but it is still recruiting the volunteers it needs to carry out the tests. Finding volunteers is increasingly difficult as global vaccination rates have increased since the pandemic began. The trial requires unvaccinated test subjects.

The stakes may be high for Walvax to complete its trials soon and begin rolling out the jabs.

On Wednesday, Bloomberg reported that Hong Kong’s European Chamber of Commerce expects mainland China—and Hong Kong by proxy—to remain closed off from the world until the country starts administering an mRNA vaccine as a booster to its 1.4 billion citizens. The chamber believes that China may only feel confident in opening its borders once citizens can get boosted with more effective mRNA vaccines.

But the chamber said it expects that process of boosting citizens with mRNA shots to take up to two years, with China and Hong Kong potentially remaining closed until the spring of 2024.

Source:

https://fortune.com/2022/01/26/china-covid-vaccine-mrna-homegrown-walvax-reopen-borders/


Other reads:

https://healthticket.blogspot.com/2022/05/chinas-bet-on-homegrown-mrna-vaccines.html

https://healthticket.blogspot.com/2022/04/chinas-biggest-covid-failure-is-not.html

https://arisechina.blogspot.com/2022/01/china-has-rejected-worlds-top-mrna.html

https://arisechina.blogspot.com/2022/01/china-rushes-to-develop-mrna-covid-19.html

https://healthticket.blogspot.com/2021/05/15-apr-21-how-china-passed-up-vaccine.html

https://healthticket.blogspot.com/2021/05/top-chinese-official-admits-vaccines.html


Related Articles


Sunday 23 January 2022

STOCKS TO WATCH: AstraZeneca first in line for NHS Covid booster?

 Is an eye-catching drug deal brewing? Industry sources say AstraZeneca is closing in on a contract with the Government to buy significant supplies of its drug Evusheld. 


The antibody cocktail could help Britons whose immune systems are unlikely to respond well to a Covid vaccine to fight the virus. 

The drug has yet to receive approval from UK regulators but Astra has already sold 1.2million doses to the US. 


© Provided by This Is Money Competition: Astra, one of the first out of the blocks with a virus vaccine, is up against GlaxoSmithKline, Pfizer and Merck in the race to supply Covid drugs on a global level

Astra, one of the first out of the blocks with a virus vaccine, is up against  GlaxoSmithKline, Pfizer and Merck in the race to supply Covid drugs on a global level. 

But it may be the first UK firm to secure a big order from the NHS, which has committed to large orders from the US's Pfizer and Merck. 

A clutch of other drugs, including ones from Japanese giants Takeda and Fujifilm, are being used in NHS trials, looking at everything from preventing mild illness becoming serious to treating long Covid. AstraZeneca declined to comment.

Source

Saturday 15 January 2022

The 20 easiest UK unis to get into

 It’s official: These are the 20 easiest unis to get into

Time to get me a second degree


Let’s be real – for all its ups and downs, uni is no easy ride. But what if we could make part of that journey easier? What if – when stressing about your A-Levels – you could selectively choose a uni based on how easy it is to get into? Well, once again, we’ve got your back.

Save The Student analysed UCAS data to determine the percentage of students who receive an offer after applying to each university in the UK, proving once and for all which unis are the easiest to get into.

Aberystwyth University tops the list as the easiest uni to get into – with a 96.6 per cent offer rate. Guess it’s a hard job convincing students to come to Wales as it is.

Meanwhile, Exeter is the only Russell Group uni to make the cut, with an 87.5 per cent offer rate.

Check out the 20 easiest unis to get into below:

1. Aberystwyth University – 96.6 per cent

2. Bishop Grosseteste University – 94.5 per cent

3. Ravensbourne University London – 92.9 per cent

4. University for the Creative Arts – 92.5 per cent

5. Plymouth College of Art – 91.1 per cent

6. University of Sussex – 89.3 per cent

7. University of Roehampton – 89.3 per cent

8. Northumbria University – 85.5 per cent

9. Nottingham Trent University – 88.6 per cent

10. University of Kent – 88.6 per cent

11. York St John University – 88.5 per cent

12. Liverpool Hope University – 88.1 per cent

13. Coventry University – 87.8 per cent

14. London Metropolitan University – 87.5 per cent

15. University of Exeter – 87.5 per cent

16. University of Wales Trinity Saint David – 87.4 per cent

17. Newman University, Birmingham – 87.0 per cent

18. University College Birmingham – 87.0 per cent

19. University of Winchester – 86.7 per cent

20. Cardiff Metropolitan University – 86.7 per cent

Related stories recommended by this writer:

• If you wanted to earn more than Russell Group grads, you should’ve gone to these unis

https://thetab.com/uk/2022/01/12/its-official-these-are-the-20-easiest-unis-to-get-into-234908




Ranked: The 50 unis you should’ve gone to if you wanted an easy 2:1

Easy for you, maybe


As a hungover fresher, missing yet another 9am lecture, you’re always telling yourself “it’s ok, I only need a 2:1”. That sweet ignorance is quickly shattered into your first term of second year though, when you suddenly clock how difficult that 2:1 might actually be.

Uni’s all about balance after all, right? Who needs to come out with a first if you can come out with a nice group of mates, fun memories from all your nights out and a degree good enough to bag you a decent job.

Well, luckily for you, we’ve put together a list of the 50 unis where you’re most likely to get the holy 2:1.

Based on data from HESA, stats show the uni you should’ve gone to get an easy 2:1 is LSE – with 95 per cent of students bagging one. Failing that, it’s Durham. A classic insurance choice.

Maybe it’s easy there or maybe they only take smart, motivated people. Who knows – but if you want to play the odds, then it’s worth knowing the percentages.

Read More

These are the 50 unis you should have gone to if you wanted an easy 2.1:

Note: We excluded unis with under 500 graduates in a year, as HESA rounds totals to the nearest five and small totals can be distorted

Related stories recommended by this writer:

• These are the 50 hardest unis in the UK to get a first from

• These are the UK universities producing the most millionaires

• Named and shamed: The 17 Russell Group unis failing to recruit enough working class students

https://thetab.com/uk/2021/12/15/ranked-the-50-unis-you-shouldve-gone-to-if-you-wanted-an-easy-21-232348


Related stories recommended by this writer:

• Male grads are 40 per cent more likely than women to earn £30k and above

• These are the subjects which will earn you the most money straight out of uni

• These are the unis you should’ve gone to if you wanted to earn £40k out of uni



These are the unis you should’ve gone to if you wanted to earn £40k out of uni

Don’t look at this table if you go to Leeds, ngl


You know what’d be nice: earning £40k straight out of uni. Fortunately, there’s now data showing which uni you really should have gone to if you wanted to make that a reality.

Stats collected by HESA on 2017/18 grads show that nearly a third of Imperial grads earn over £39,000.

Just one in 50 Queen’s University Belfast grads surveyed by HESA bring in the same amount.

Cambridge narrowly tops Oxbridge in the rankings, but both are beat out by LSE, proving every stereotype about the London consultant factory is grounded in lucrative reality.

Giving thanks to the business school legends, Warwick are also up there, and Bristol won’t be reliant on daddy’s money for too long.

Check out the full table to feel quite bad about your prospects:

Related stories recommended by this writer:

• Revealed: This is how much your uni is spending to test students for Covid

• Five students suspended from uni after ‘horrifying’ firework incident on campus

• Four students kicked out of their halls because they broke uni Covid rules

https://thetab.com/uk/2020/11/06/these-are-the-unis-you-shouldve-gone-to-if-you-wanted-to-earn-40k-out-of-uni-181506



These are the subjects which will earn you the most money straight out of uni

Is it me or did vets just become super attractive?


Some people go to uni for the nightlife, to make friends, because they have no idea what the hell else to do and some, believe it or not, to secure good career prospects for the future. If you’re one of the latter, it’s likely you’ve already done your research and could name the highest earning subjects with your eyes shut. If you’re like the rest of us though- it’s time to get clued up.

We’ve analysed HESA’s graduate salary data to find the median earnings for each grads from each uni subject. To find this, HESA asked what 2018/19 grads are up to, so – pandemic aside – it’s a pretty good guide to what you’re looking at raking in.

Turns out vets don’t just go into their career because they love animals- they’re earning more than any of their uni mates by far- a solid £31,000. The medics and dentists don’t follow too far behind at £26,750, but for all the clubbing nights they missed to fit in yet another study sesh, I hope it’s worth it.

Art and design students rest firmly at the bottom of the list, and can expect to earn about £18,333 a year when they graduate.

Surprisingly, law’s not exactly up there- with average earnings standing at £19,833. You’re agriculture mates are currently laughing at you- earning on average 500 quid more than you. Peak.

How much will your degree subject earn you out of uni?

Medicine & dentistry –  £26,750

Subjects allied to medicine-  £20,667

Biological sciences-  £19,833

Veterinary science-  £31,000

Agriculture & related subjects-  £20,333

Physical sciences-  £20,833

Mathematical sciences-  £21,833

Computer science-  £21,667

Engineering & technology-  £22,667

Architecture, building & planning- £20,667

Social studies-  £21,333

Law-  £19,833

Business & administrative studies-  £21,167

Mass communications & documentation- £19,167

Languages- £20,500

Historical & philosophical studies-  £20,500

Creative arts & design- £18,333

Education-  £19,833

Combined- £21,000

Related stories recommended by this writer:

• These are the unis you should’ve gone to if you wanted to earn £40k out of uni

• These are the uni cities where students rely on daddy’s money the most

• The Russell Group unis where you’re most likely to be unsatisfied with your course

https://thetab.com/uk/2021/11/19/these-are-the-subjects-which-will-earn-you-the-most-money-straight-out-of-uni-228971