Who Faq Vaccine
Who Faq Vaccine
Who Faq Vaccine
vaccines
frequently asked questions
(FAQ)
05 Additional questions 25
How are COVID-19 vaccines administered? 26
What is country readiness? 26
Will Sri Lanka receive a single type of vaccine? 26
Does the development of a COVID-19 vaccine mean 27
the pandemic is over?
After vaccination, your body will remember the disease-causing germ and
how to fight it following an infection or exposure. Therefore, subsequently,
you develop immunity. Immunity means that if you are exposed to the
germ in the future, your immune system can quickly destroy it before you
become unwell.
Phase 1
The vaccine is given to a small number of volunteers to assess its safety,
confirm it generates an immune response, and determine the appropriate
dosage. Generally, in this phase, vaccines are tested in young, healthy
adults.
Phase 2
The vaccine is then given to several hundred volunteers to further assess its
ability to generate an immune response (efficacy) and possible side effects
(safety). Participants in this phase have the same characteristics (e.g., age,
sex) as the people for whom the vaccine is intended. There are usually
multiple trials in this phase to evaluate various age groups and different
formulations of the vaccine. This phase often includes a control group, a
group of people who do not receive the vaccine, to determine whether the
vaccinated group’s changes (outcomes) can be attributed to the vaccine or
if they happened by chance.
Phase 3
In this phase, the vaccine is given to thousands of volunteers. Like in phase
2 trials, some volunteers are in a control group, while others receive the
vaccine. This phase usually generates enough data to determine the efficacy
and safety of the vaccine. Phase 3 trials are conducted across multiple
countries, with multiple sites in each country, to ensure the findings are
applicable to a diverse group of people.
Phase 4 trials
Once phase 3 is completed, vaccines go through a review by regional
or national regulatory authorities, who decide if the vaccine is safe and
effective enough to be put on the market. Additionally, a policy committee
decides how the vaccine should be used in the country or region’s
vaccination programme. Once a vaccine is authorized, it is manufactured
and widely distributed. However, even when vaccines are in the market
and are being used, continuous and thorough monitoring is conducted to
detect and respond to any adverse effects and evaluate its effectiveness in
routine population settings. This is called post-marketing surveillance.
We are still learning about immunity to COVID-19. Most people who are
infected with COVID-19 develop an immune response within the first few
weeks, but we don’t know how strong or lasting that immune response is
or how it varies for different people. There have also been reports of people
infected with COVID-19 for a second time. Until we better understand the
disease and immunity towards COVID-19, it will not be possible to know
what proportion of the population is immune and how long that immunity
lasts, let alone make future predictions. These challenges should preclude
any plans that try to increase immunity within a population by allowing
people to get infected.
COVID-19
COVID-19
VACCINE
ENICCAV
91-DIVOC
lm01
VACCINE
COVID-19
Inactivated • Sinovac
Inactivated vaccines are produced by growing a • Wuhan Institute of Biological
bacterium or virus and then inactivating it with Products/Sinopharm
heat, chemicals, or radiation. Inactivated vaccines • Beijing Institute of Biological
are not alive and cannot replicate, but they still Products/Sinopharm
trigger an immune response. • Bharat Biotech, ICMR, National
Institute of Virology
Since the virus itself has been destroyed, it
cannot infect cells, and therefore inactivated
vaccines can be given to people with
compromised immune systems.
For updated information on vaccine trials, please use the following links:
The six COVID-19 vaccines which have currently completed phase 3 trials
are Pfizer-BioNTech, Moderna, Oxford AstraZeneca, Sputnik V, Sinopharm,
and Sinovac.
WHO has received efficacy results from all six products; however, only two
have peer-reviewed efficacy results (Oxford AstraZeneca by the Lancet, and
Pfizer-BioNTech by the New England Journal of Medicine)
The EUL pathway involves a rigorous assessment of late phase 2 and phase
3 clinical trial data and substantial additional data on safety, efficacy,
quality, and risk management. The data is reviewed by independent
experts, not by WHO authorities.
Currently, about 190 countries and economies will benefit from the COVAX
facility, including 92 lower-income countries that are eligible for financial
assistance through the Advance Market Commitment (AMC). An initial
proportional allocation of donor-funded doses will be distributed across
AMC-eligible countries as “jumpstarting” introductions. Countries will
progressively receive doses until resources are exhausted. COVAX aims to
disseminate donor-funded doses to 20% of each AMC-country’s population;
the final allocation will be determined by vaccine development success,
dose price, vaccine characteristics, and available resources.
As the supply of vaccines will be limited during the initial phase, to ensure
equitable access for vaccines, WHO’s Strategic Advisory Group of Experts
on Immunization (SAGE) issued policy recommendations on population
prioritization based on evidence generated during the COVID-19 pandemic.