产品展示
  • 汽车反光镜后视镜车贴创意个性车身可爱后视镜汽车贴纸卡通装饰贴
  • 北京现代ix35内饰改装专用汽车用品配件中控仪表台避光垫防晒遮阳
  • 包邮特价汽车音响V12 705四路4声道功放大功率放大器可接4门喇叭
  • 瓦尔塔蓄电池AGM 92适配宝马7系X6奔驰S级路虎发现4新款汽车电瓶
  • 适用于荣威550 350 360 名爵MG6 GT 倒车镜内三角板 后视镜后饰板
联系方式

邮箱:[email protected]

电话:020-123456789

传真:020-123456789

汽车电瓶

Putin says untested coronavirus vaccine set for rollout in Russia.

2024-11-03 01:39:27      点击:816

Russian President Vladimir Putin announced Tuesday the country had approved a largely untested vaccine for the coronavirus, which will be part of a widespread voluntary inoculation effort in October. The announcement comes even though the drug developed by the Gamaleya Institute in Moscow has not completed the clinical trial phase of development, meaning it has only been used on a small scale. Russian scientists have also failed to publish any of their scientific research that backs up their claim. That hasn’t stopped Putin from using the drug as a propaganda tool, telling a Cabinet meeting on Tuesday, “It works effectively enough, forms a stable immunity and I repeat, it has gone through all necessary tests.”

Perhaps sensing that “effectively enough” wasn’t quite convincing enough, Putin emphasized that one of his daughters had successfully taken the vaccine. “Putin said that his daughter had a temperature of 38 degrees Celsius (100.4 Fahrenheit) on the day of the first vaccine injection, and then it dropped to just over 37 degrees (98.6 Fahrenheit) on the following day,” according to the Associated Press. “After the second shot she again had a slight increase in temperature, but then it was all over.”

Popular in News & Politics

  1. I Watched Trump’s Lawyers Cross-Examine Stormy Daniels. It Was Painful.
  2. After a Rough Week of Testimony, Stormy Daniels Seems to Have the Upper Hand
  3. I Read the Embattled Columbia President’s Old Book About What We Owe Each Other. It’s … Not Good.
  4. Think You’re Smarter Than a Slate Staff Writer? Find Out With This Week’s News Quiz.

“Russia’s vaccine uses two doses to deliver different harmless cold viruses, or adenoviruses, that have been engineered to carry into cells the gene for the spiky protein that studs the outside of the coronavirus,” the Washington Post reports. “The approach is also being used by scientists at the pharmaceutical giant Johnson & Johnson, the Chinese company CanSino Biologics and the University of Oxford in their vaccine candidates.”

To get a sense of how Russia is approaching the global hunt for a vaccine, Kirill Dmitriev, the head of the Russian Direct Investment Fund that bankrolled the vaccination drive, said the drug will be named “Sputnik,” a throwback to the Cold War space race era. He also said tens of thousands of Russians—including critical workers and teachers—will be given the vaccination this month while it is undergoing the third phase of clinical trials. Russian officials say a state research center in Siberia also has a second vaccine that is close to being ready for use.

The hurried announcement has raised concerns among the global health community and the World Health Organization reiterated that all vaccines should go through the established trial mechanism. In Washington, on the other hand, a certain American president quietly muttered to himself: So you’re telling me there’s a chance.

Tweet Share Share Comment

N. Korea reiterates call to declare end to Korean War
IAEA calls on North Korea to re