KOMPAS.com – Research on the corona virus vaccine continues even as the testing process is accelerated.
There are three vaccines coronavirus different released on Monday (7/20/2020) shows that all three are safe.
All of them showed positive results with evidence that the vaccine can produce an immune response that is expected to protect people against infection.
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One of the vaccines is a vaccine developed by the University of Oxford.
Reported CNNOn Tuesday (7/21/2020), preliminary results from a 1/2 phase trial showed that the vaccine coronavirus developed by the University of Oxford and AstraZeneca is safe and induces an immune response.
The research is carefully monitored and published in journals The Lancet.
Antibody response
However, the researchers stressed that more research is needed to find out whether vaccines protect people against viruses.
Oxford Vaccine triggers an antibody response in 28 days and T-cell response in 14 days.
Neutralized antibodies were detected in most volunteers after one injection and in all volunteers after two injections.
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Principal researcher Dr. Andrew Pollard explains the immune system has two ways to find and attack pathogens (antibody responses and T cells).
The vaccine’s effectiveness is unknown for parents with severe symptoms of Covid-19.
It is also not known how long the vaccine can protect.
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Claimed no serious side effects
The vaccine trial involved 1,077 people aged 18-55 years without a history of infection coronavirus.
The study took place in five British hospitals from the end of April to the end of May. Participants received the Covid-19 vaccine or meningitis vaccine.
The vaccine from Oxford was made to induce both, so that it can attack the virus when it circulates in the body, as well as attacking infected cells.
There are no serious side effects associated with vaccines. Fatigue and headaches are the most commonly reported reactions.
Other common side effects include pain at the injection site, muscle aches, malaise, cold, burning sensation, and fever.
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Reported India TV News, (7/20/2020), vaccine trial team coronavirus The University of Oxford said the vaccine could be available as early as September.
The chairman of the Berkshire Research Ethics Committee, which approved the Oxford trial, David Carpenter, said that although the date is unknown, working with large pharmaceutical companies, the vaccine could be widely available around September.
The vaccine was developed by the Jenner Institute, supported by the British government and AstraZeneca which will support the production phase.
Vaccine potential coronavirus Oxford has been licensed to AstraZeneca.
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