“Safety requires larger numbers of participants in trials. What we’re looking for is a ‘safety signal’ — anything that might hint that something serious might be caused by a vaccine, and how common it is,” he said.“We look at common side effects, severe side effects, those severe enough to discontinue the course, deaths that occur after vaccination, lab abnormalities. For COVID vaccines we want to make sure the vaccine doesn’t make severe disease worse.”AstraZeneca’s coronavirus vaccine rollout in Australia was planned for March but has been jeopardised by a delay in delivering essential data to the federal government.It’s fallen behind the registration timeline of the rival Pfizer jab which could be approved this month.The Herald Sun can reveal that the Therapeutic Goods Administration is not expecting to grant AstraZeneca a provisional registration until February.But the TGA anticipates Pfizer will move to the next stage by the end of this month.This is despite AstraZeneca getting through the initial provisional determination step five days earlier, in October.Paperwork appears to be the impediment.“The TGA is expecting further data from AstraZeneca in regard to their COVID-19 vaccine in late January 2021,” an administration spokeswoman said.
“Australia is on track to have the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine provisionally registered by the end of January 2021, subject to regulatory requirements being met.”An AstraZeneca spokeswoman said it didn’t determine timings.“AstraZeneca is continuing to provide data to the TGA for them to consider,” she said.Commonwealth chief medical officer Paul Kelly said “the approvals will happen when all the information we need to make those approvals is available.“That will be fast-tracked as much as possible but no shortcuts will be made,” Professor Kelly said.“The safety check has to be there before anyone gets this vaccine in Australia. There will be no delays to the rollout of coronavirus vaccine — other than those which are absolutely necessary for safety.”Prime Minister Scott Morrison said Australians would expect all normal safety procedures to be followed.“We are moving this as swiftly as it safely can be done,” he told 3AW.“Australia is not in an emergency situation like the United Kingdom so we don’t have to cut corners, we don’t have to take unnecessary risks.
An 82-year-old man has become the first to receive the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine in Britain’s second COVID-19 inoculation campaign.
“We are learning a lot from some of the issues that are presenting themselves and the confusion in particular that is there about doses and distribution and administering of the vaccines.“But they are in a position where they have no other choice because of the terrible situation they find themselves in.“Now in Australia we are not in that situation, so it is important that Australians have total confidence in the vaccine and that requires all the proper processes to be followed.”When asked if criticism about the vaccine rollout timeframe from the federal Labor was fair, Mr Morrison said Anthony Albanese was “uninformed” and had not accepted briefings offered to him by the government. “It is an uninformed view,” Mr Morrison said. “They were offered a briefing in December, which wasn’t taken up.“I think the last briefing the shadow health minister (Chris Bowen) had was in November. “What’s informing his views is only for him to explain because he certainly hasn’t been sitting down with our officials who are running this process and the medical professionals who are working to pull together all of the information they need to make the decision on the vaccine.”
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