From the DW:
“Russia approves world's first
coronavirus vaccine, Putin announces”
Russian President Vladimir Putin
said that Moscow's Gamaleya Institute has registered the world's first COVID-19
vaccine for use. According to Putin, his daughter is among those inoculated. Russia's
Health Ministry has given regulatory approval for the world's first COVID-19
vaccine after less than two months of human testing, President Vladimir Putin
said on Tuesday. "This morning, for the first time in the world, a vaccine
against the new coronavirus was registered" in Russia, Putin said during a
televised video conference call with government ministers. Putin added that the
vaccine, developed by Moscow's Gamaleya Institute, has proven efficient during
tests and promises to offer "sustainable immunity" against the
coronavirus. "I would like to repeat that it has passed all the necessary
tests,'' Putin said. "The most important thing is to ensure full safety of
using the vaccine and its efficiency.''
Putin's daughter among vaccinated he Russian leader also said that one of
his daughters has already been inoculated and is feeling well. "One of my
daughters got vaccinated, so in this sense, she took part in the
testing," Putin said. After the first
vaccine shot, his daughter experienced a slight fever, 38 degrees Celsius. Her
temperature came down to just slightly above normal the next day. "After the second shot, she had a slight
fever again, and then everything was fine. She is feeling well and has a high
antibody count," Putin said. He
didn't specify which of his two daughters, Maria or Katerina, received the
vaccine. Russian health authorities have said that medical workers, teachers
and other risk groups will be the first to receive shots of the vaccine.
Years of work reduced to weeks Russia is the first country to register a
COVID-19 vaccine. As countries worldwide race to produce the first vaccine,
health experts warn that speed and national pride could compromise safety. Scientists
in Russia and abroad have questioned Moscow's decision to register the vaccine
before Phase 3 trials that normally last for months and involve thousands of
people. Vaccines typically take several years to test
and produce on a large scale, but Putin emphasized that the vaccine underwent
the necessary trials and tha the vaccination will be voluntary. Russian
officials have said that large-scale production of the vaccine will begin in
September, and mass vaccination may start as early as October.
^ There's no way any Russian with
even basic common sense is going to be smart enough to take this
"vaccine." If Putin believed in it so much he should have taken it
himself. Just because he gave it to one of his daughters proves nothing. He has
two daughters and he may have given it to the one he doesn't really care for
and not his favorite. ^
https://www.dw.com/en/russia-approves-worlds-first-coronavirus-vaccine-putin-announces/a-54524385
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