Description
Added on the 12/07/2021 03:49:35 - Copyright : Wochit
Mexico City, Mar 9 (EFE) .- Mexico not only has multiple agreements in place with international pharmaceutical companies but also is working on its own Covid-19 vaccine projects, a task being carried out by several different universities.(CAMERA: Juan Manuel Ramirez)Statements in Spanish fromEdda Sciutto, research coordinator of the IIBm of the UNAM:"Development is going more slowly because we had to acquire a lot of materials, we had materials in the lab, but we had to wait for the supply we needed before starting our research. However, we believe that, with the necessary equipment, we should have a national vaccine by October this year."
Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Massive studies have shown great things, says Business Insider. Two leading coronavirus vaccines are highly effective at preventing people from getting COVID-19. Top researchers are already pitching plans for additional studies. This research aims to answer a critical question... Will this also prevent transmission of the virus? Many people wonder, particularly, about asymptomatic infections and carriers. Key barriers to these studies are getting funding and getting vaccine developers on board.
Tehran, Apr 29 (EFE) .- (Camera: Artemis Razmipour) The Pasteur Institute of Iran, a reference centre for infectious diseases, reported on Wednesday that it is keeping four lines of research open, one of them searching for a vaccine, to combat COVID-19.FOOTAGE OF THE CENTRE.SOUNDBITES OF:Alireza Biglari, director of the Pasteur Institute."The number of our laboratories has increased from two to more than 120 and, regarding the number of tests, the first day we could do less than 200 tests in the country, but now we can easily carry out even up to 45,000 daily."
Thousands of demonstrators from across the US march in Washington, DC, to decry Covid-19 mandates. Mostly maskless, the protesters walk from the Washington Monument to the Lincoln Memorial in a city that has adopted mask and vaccine mandates. IMAGES
U.S. President Barack Obama attends an outdoor arrival ceremony in heavy rain, as the first sitting U.S. president to visit Laos. Rough Cut (no reporter narration).