February 28, 2021
2 mins read

Germany urged to back Oxford jabs

WHO currently recommends the use of the AstraZeneca vaccine even if the variants are present in a country

Watzl’s call comes after recent studies in Scotland showed the AstraZeneca jab to be effective among the elderly….reports Asian Lite News

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GmDVApysQfo

A senior German immunologist, Carsten Watzl, has urged his country to start allowing persons aged over 65 to receive the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine.

In a BBC interview, Watzl, head of the German Society for Immunology, predicted regulators would have to reverse their decision to not recommend the jab for older people.

He urged German Chancellor Angela Merkel to have the vaccine live on TV to prove it is safe.

Germany’s vaccine commission is currently reviewing its recommendation.

Watzl’s call comes after recent studies in Scotland showed the AstraZeneca jab to be effective among the elderly.

https://twitter.com/CarstenWatzl/status/1365372947645542404

Germany is one of several EU states that have expressed doubts over the efficacy of the vaccine in older people.

The country is currently struggling to avoid a third wave of infections as cases remain stubbornly high.

Also read: FDA to approve J&J vaccine soon

The EU’s medical regulator approved the use of the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine for all age groups in January.

But the rollout was met by some public scepticism after regulators in countries including France, Germany and Italy recommended that it should not be used for people over 65. They citied insufficient data on its efficacy for older people.

German health authorities have so far used fewer than 300,000 of the 1.17 million doses of the AstraZeneca vaccine the country has received.

Carsten Watzl

In January, French President Emmanuel Macron said the jab was “quasi-ineffective” for older age groups – a claim strongly refuted by the UK government and British medical regulators. AstraZeneca itself says the vaccine is effective at all ages.

The UK is among countries that have approved the jab for all age groups.

The decision was boosted by recent research led by Public Health Scotland, which found that four weeks after the first dose, hospital admissions were reduced by 85 per cent and 94 per cent for the Pfizer-BioNTech and AstraZeneca jabs respectively.

Among the over 80s, there was an overall 81 per cent reduction in the numbers admitted to hospital when the results for both vaccines were combined.

Also read:WHO backs AstraZeneca vaccine use amid concerns

Previous Story

Slow fashion makes strong statement

Next Story

‘Anek’ to hit theaters in Sep

Latest from -Top News

Modi, Putin Discuss Alaska

Russian President Vladimir Putin on Monday spoke with Prime Minister Narendra Modi, sharing his assessment of last week’s meeting with US President Donald Trump in Alaska PM Modi reiterated India’s consistent stance

Wang Yi Arrives In Delhi

In July, EAM Jaishankar attended the SCO Meeting of the Council of Ministers of Foreign Affairs in Tianjin, meeting his Chinese counterpart and calling on Xi Jinping alongside other SCO Foreign Ministers

Peace Key To India-China Ties

Wang Yi is scheduled to hold a fresh round of Special Representatives dialogue with NSA Ajit Doval on the boundary question and later call on Prime Minister Narendra Modi Emphasising the importance

Egypt, Palestine PMs Discuss Gaza

Palestinian Prime Minister Mustafa highlighted that the Arab-Islamic peace plan stresses reconstruction of Gaza without displacement of its people Egyptian Prime Minister Mostafa Madbouly and his Palestinian counterpart Mohammad Mustafa met in

European Leaders Join Zelensky

The White House meeting comes after a tense encounter in February when Trump berated Zelensky in front of US Vice-President J.D. Vance, underscoring why Kyiv is now bringing allies to strengthen its
Go toTop