Working on Omicron jab, says Pfizer

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London: fizer is working on an updated jab in response to the Omicron variant that could be ready in 100 days, according to the head of American multinational pharmaceutical giant, who said people may need to have annual Covid vaccination for many years to come.

Pfizer’s chief executive Dr Albert Bourla told the BBC that he is of the view that annual vaccinations would be needed to maintain a “very high level of protection” against the deadly disease that has claimed over five million lives across the world.

1st case of new variant in us

  • The US recorded its first confirmed case of the Omicron variant on Wednesday
  • The infected person was identified as a traveller who returned from SA on Nov 22
  • He had two doses of the Moderna vaccine and wasn’t yet due for a booster shot. AP

Bourla was speaking to the BBC before the emergence of the Omicron variant, first identified in South Africa and also before the announcement that the UK government had signed contracts to buy the 54 million additional Pfizer-BioNTech and 60 million Moderna doses for 2022 and 2023.

These deals include access to modified vaccines if needed to combat Omicron and future variants of concern, the Department of Health has said.

Dr Bourla said Pfizer had already made updated vaccines in response to the Beta, also first identified in South Africa, and Delta, first identified in India, variants but that they had not been needed.

The company is now working on an updated jab in response to the Omicron variant that could be ready in 100 days, the report added.

By the end of the year, Pfizer expects to have supplied three billion doses of its messenger ribonucleic-acid (mRNA) vaccine with four billion planned for next year.

Curbs for unvaccinated: merkel

Berlin: German Chancellor Angela Merkel said that people who aren’t vaccinated will be excluded from non-essential stores, cultural and recreational venues, and Parliament will consider a general vaccine mandate, as part of an effort to curb Covid infections.