South Africa suspends use of AstraZeneca’s COVID-19 vaccine after it fails to clearly stop virus variant By Jon CohenFeb. 8, 2021 , 2:15 PM doi:10.1126/science.abg9559 Science’s COVID-19 reporting is supported by the Heising-Simons Foundation. Another COVID-19 vaccine has run into trouble in South Africa, showing less protection there than elsewhere because a SARS-CoV-2 variant that can apparently dodge key antibodies has become widespread. In the wake of the new finding, the country halted plans to next week to launch the country’s first immunization campaign with the vaccine and may instead switch to a different one. The stakes are high globally for this particular vaccine because its makers, AstraZeneca and the University of Oxford, hope it will be widely used in developing countries; they project they can produce 3 billion doses this year for about $3 each, far more product at a far lower price than any other vaccine shown to offer protection against COVID-19. Yet the South African trial of the vaccine, conducted in about 2000 people, found such a low efficacy against mild and moderate disease, under 25%, that it would not meet minimal international standards for emergency use. But scientists are hopeful it might still prevent severe disease and death—arguably the most important job for any COVID-19 vaccine. ┈••✾•🌹🌿🌺🌿🌹•✾••┈ @jedbie تلنگر بیداری دانشگاهیان بیدار