Tag Archive for: Vaccine

President Cyril Ramaphosa has announced that South Africa will move back to lockdown level 3, taking effect from midnight tonight.

In an address on Monday evening (28 December), Ramaphosa said that the move is being done to limit super-spreader events further, and will adjust previous level 3 regulations to keep the economy as open as possible.

It will also allow government to focus on the social distancing measures, and aims to ease the pressure on hospitals.

The change follows meetings held by the president and his cabinet as part of the National Coronavirus Command Council on Sunday, and come as the country surpasses 1 million cumulative Covid-19 infections and record daily increases.

“Nearly 27,000 South African are known to have died from Covid-19. The number of new coronovirus infections are increasing at an alarming rate. Infections are surging in KwaZulu-Natal, the Western Cape and Gauteng. Infections are alarmingly on the rise in Limpopo,” Ramaphosa siad.

“Infections are on the rise, in part, because we as humans are social beings. We feel the need to visit friends and family, attend religious services, and go to parties. But this is a time of danger,” the president warned.

Infections are being driven by super spreader events, the president said, which include year-end functions, family gatherings and music and cultural events.

“This is where infections happen most. This is cause for alarm, and points to an extreme lack of vigilance. We have let our guard down, and we are now paying the price,” he said. Venues are also being over-crowded, and social distancing and prevention protocols are not being followed.

Sale of alcohol

“One of the more difficult areas of regulation relates to the sale of alcohol,” the president said. “The liquor industry is a major employer and an important contributor to our economy. Our priority at this time, however, must be to save lives,” he said.

The president said that the consumption of alcohol has exacerbated the stress put on healthcare facilities, driving up the number of trauma cases in hospitals.

Worryingly, hospitals are reporting being at, or close to maximum capacity – while healthcare workers are exhausted and becoming infected in higher numbers. “They are almost at breaking point,” the president said. “All because of our actions, and failure to take responsibility. Unless we act now, and act decisively…thousands of more people will lose their lives.”

“Night clubs and businesses engaged in the sale and transportation of liquor will not be allowed to operate. The Level 3 restrictions will remain in place until 15 January 2021,” Ramaphosa said.

“These regulations may be reviewed within the next few weeks if we see a sustained decline in infections and hospital admissions,” Ramaphosa said.

Under the new lockdown level 3, the following takes effect:

  • All indoor and outdoor gatherings will be prohibited for 14 days, with an exception to funerals and places like restaurants and gyms. These exceptions will be clarified in the official regulations.
  • Nationwide curfew will be extended to 21h00 to 06h00. Aside from essential services, no one will be permitted to be out during this time. All establishments will close at 20h00, with a more specific list to be published soon.
  • Every individual will be responsible, legally, for wearing a mask in public. It is now compulsory for every person to wear a mask in a public place. Violators will be guilty of an offence, and could be prosecuted. They could be liable for a fine or imprisonment, or both.
  • Alcohol sales from retail outlets and onsite consumption are banned. The prohibition on the public consumption of alcohol remains.
  • Businesses will continue to operate, subject to guidelines. Nightclubs and businesses that rely on alcohol sales will not be allowed to operate.
  • All beaches, dams, rivers and public parks and public pools in hotspot areas will be closed to the public.

These measures will be in place until 15 January 2021, at which time they will be reviewed based on the situation, Ramaphosa said.

A notable change is that, from midnight, it is compulsory for every person to wear a mask in a public space. A person who does not wear a cloth mask covering over the nose and mouth in a public place will be committing an offence.

A person who does not wear a mask could be arrested and prosecuted. On conviction, they will be liable to a fine or to imprisonment for a period not exceeding six months or to both a fine and imprisonment.

This is a drastic measure but is now necessary to ensure compliance with the most basic of preventative measures, the president said.

People living and moving within hotspot areas are recommended to keep travel as limited as possible.

The following areas have been declared hotspot regions:

  • Eastern Cape: Sarah Baartman, Chris Hani, Buffalo City, Nelson Mandela Bay, Amathole, OR Tambo, Alfred Nzo.
  • KwaZulu-Natal: eThekwini, Umgungundlovu, Ugu, Harry Gwala, Ilembe, King Cetshwayo.
  • Gauteng: West Rand, Tshwane, Johannesburg, Ekurhuleni.
  • Western Cape: the West Coast District, Overberg District, Winelands District, Cape Town, Central Karoo District are hotspots. This is in addition to the Garden Route District.
  • North West: Bojanala District.
  • Limpopo: the Waterberg District and the Capricorn District.

For information about COVID-19 from the World Health Organization, click here. To track cases, click here. To read President Ramaphosa’s address to the nation, click here.

 

For information as to how Relocation Africa can help you with your Mobility, Immigration, Research, Remuneration, and Expat Tax needs, email info@relocationafrica.com, or call us on +27 21 763 4240.

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South Africa is set to produce its first vaccine in 25 years, but it won’t be a Covid-19 jab. Plans are, however, in place to ‘fill and finish’ Covid-19 vaccines in South Africa.

Aspen Pharmacare will not produce Johnson & Johnson’s Covid-19 vaccine itself in South Africa. Instead, Aspen will be one of six sites globally responsible for putting the vaccine into vials and packing the jabs for distribution, Johnson & Johnson Chief Scientific Officer, Paul Stoffels, confirmed late on Tuesday.

Vaccines go through several different stages from the time they are formulated until they reach clinic shelves. The most complicated phases involve actually creating the vaccine solution. The last and final stage, in which prepared vaccines are filled into vials and packaged for delivery, is often called “fill and finish”.

No plant in South Africa has produced a vaccine itself in 25 years, Biovac Institute CEO, Dr Morena Makhoana says. Biovac is a public-private partnership created in 2003 to revive vaccine production in South Africa after the country stopped producing vaccines locally in the 1990s.

Instead, Aspen and Biovac have historically focused on procuring and distributing jabs or filling and finishing them — as Aspen will do for Johnson & Johnson’s candidate vaccine. The duo is the only two firms working in the vaccine field locally.

Stoffels explains that building new Covid-19 vaccine capacity in South Africa and elsewhere would have taken three to five years. Instead, to quickly meet the demand for the vaccine, Johnson & Johnson will produce the vaccine at three existing plants before shipping it to six centres across the world, including Aspen’s Port Elizabeth factory, for fill and finish.

Johnson & Johnson’s experimental Covid-19 vaccine is in the late stages of human testing, which includes trials in South Africa. Stoffels says the firm expects to know in late January 2021 whether the jab works to protect people from becoming infected with the new coronavirus or developing serious Covid-19 disease.

Stoffels says that about half of Johnson & Johnson’s costs to develop its Covid-19 vaccine have been covered by the United States government, which is one of the reasons the firm will offer the jab at cost during the emergency phase of the pandemic. It has also set aside 500 million doses for the COVAX initiative.

Could South Africa produce a Covid-19 vaccine?

There are almost 350 experimental Covid-19 vaccines in development, according to the United Kingdom’s science analytics company, Airfinity. The World Health Organisation (WHO) says only about four dozen jabs have entered human clinical trials.

Airfinity CEO, Rasmus Bech Hansen, says Covid-19 vaccines fall into one of four main categories. Some jabs like Johnson & Johnson’s vaccine use harmless viruses to deliver proteins into the body and hopefully trigger an immune system response. Others — such as the Novavax vaccine trialled by Wits University — pair sterilised coronavirus proteins or parts of proteins with an immune booster to help the body create Covid-19 fighting antibodies. This kind of vaccine is sometimes called a protein sub-unit jab.

Aspen and the Biovac Institute executives say that one day their firms could produce three out of the four main types of Covid-19 vaccines.

Aspen CEO, Stephen Saad told Spotlight that its Eastern Cape plant could eventually manufacture vaccines, like Johnson & Johnson’s experimental FCovid-19 vaccine, that are often called “viral vector” vaccines.

Biovac, meanwhile, could potentially one day produce Covid-19 jabs such as Novavax as well as the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine, which uses genetic material produced in labs to trick the body into thinking the coronavirus is present and developing an immune response.

The Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations (CEPI) is working to secure poorer countries’ access to vaccines via an initiative called COVAX. CEPI has identified Biovac as a potential vaccine producer but has not entered into any formal agreements with the institute, CEPI told Spotlight.

Actually producing a Covid-19 vaccine on local soil will mean that larger pharmaceutical companies such as Johnson & Johnson will have to share some of their vaccine-making know-how with local companies, a process called technology transfer.

No quick and easy path to local production

It has taken the Biovac Institute almost 20 years to produce a vaccine from start to finish in the country. It can take anywhere from three to five years and as much as R8.9-billion to build plants to produce certain types of vaccine solutions and Makhoana says financing has been an issue.

But Biovac announced in November that it would soon begin locally producing drug firm Sanofi Pasteur’s six-in-one vaccine to protect children against illnesses such as polio, tetanus and hepatitis B.

The move follows eight years of work with the vaccine’s developer, Sanofi, to transfer the technology needed to produce the six-in-one jab in South Africa and for the local market, Makhoana says.

Johnson & Johnson has entered into a technology transfer agreement with Aspen to fill and finish its Covid-19 vaccines. Aspen declined to release details on the deal.

However, Doctors Without Borders (MSF) Access Campaign Advocacy Officer, Candice Sehoma says the agreement is more of a manufacturing deal than a meaningful transfer of technology that would bolster local production. And, she says, the deal may not guarantee South Africa better access to a Covid-19 vaccine.

“Yes, Aspen will be doing the fill and finish, but at the end of it, Johnson & Johnson still holds the intellectual property rights on that vaccine. They get to determine who, where and how their vaccine is distributed,” she told Spotlight. “Knowing that high-income countries have secured most of the [world’s] vaccines, it really leaves much in question as to… will whatever is being filled and finished locally stand to benefit South Africa and the continent.”

The United States, European Union and India alone purchased more than four billion doses of experimental Covid-19 vaccines before any jab had been shown to work, according to an analysis by Duke University in the United States.

Showdown over Covid-19 patents expected at World Trade Organisation

Meanwhile, South Africa and India have submitted a joint proposal to the World Trade Organisation (WTO) that would allow countries to waive some intellectual property rights on Covid-19 medicines, vaccines, masks, ventilators and other materials for the duration of the pandemic. Some similar provisions already exist in international trade law, but are difficult to use in practice.

However, the WHO-backed proposal — expected to be discussed at the WTO on Thursday — is facing stiff opposition from countries and the pharmaceutical industry.

The United States, United Kingdom, and Japan — who were among the first countries to buy massive amounts of Covid-19 vaccines — were among nations opposing the patent waiver by October.

Stoffels says that there are more immediate barriers to scaling up access to Covid-19 vaccines than technology transfers or patents. He explains it has been difficult to even ensure Johnson & Johnson’s manufacturing plants have the new technology needed to produce its experimental Covid-19 vaccine.

“We are developing a new production technology and scaling up [production] all at the same time,” he says while adding that the technology is still evolving. “We don’t even have enough people to do our own tech transfers to our own manufacturing facilities. We have had to find the people,” he says.

“Maybe there’s time for [that kind of tech transfer] in the next five to 10 years but at the moment, we’re focused on getting the technology stable ourselves to make sure we can supply next year.”

But speaking earlier this year, MSF’s Access Campaign Senior Vaccines Policy Adviser, Kate Elder, says she believes that the world can ramp up vaccine manufacturing while also removing patent-related barriers for future production.

“Nobody is under any naïve pretence that if there was no intellectual property then everybody is going to be able to produce vaccines,” Elder said in October. “Let’s be clear: It’s difficult to develop vaccines, and it’s difficult to manufacture them… but there is tremendous capacity in places like India and Brazil,” she said.

“You can expand manufacturing capacity and [ensure] intellectual property barriers aren’t a hindrance for any manufacturer that has the capacity to produce quality-assured, future Covid-19 vaccines.”

Airfinity predicts that access to vaccines will help curb outbreaks in the United States by March, followed by Canada, the United Kingdom and the European Union later next year. India and China are expected to follow suit in 2022.

“There’s more uncertainty around the rest of the world,” Bech Hansen says. “It really depends on the results of upcoming trials and the availability of large-scale production facilities.”

 

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Aspen Pharmacare Holdings Ltd. agreed to make the Covid-19 vaccine candidate being developed by Johnson & Johnson at a factory in South Africa, a move that could help with distribution on a continent with otherwise limited manufacturing capacity.

Africa’s biggest drug maker has the capacity to produce 300 million doses a year at the plant in Port Elizabeth if the shot is approved, the company said in a statement on Monday. J&J’s experimental inoculation against the virus that’s swept the world this year is still in clinical trials, after a brief pause last month after a patient became sick.

The race to develop and gain regulatory approval for a Covid-19 vaccine is seen as a critical step toward controlling the pandemic, which has killed more than 1.2 million people around the world and shows little sign of dissipating. Yet there’s concern poorer nations will be left without due to the huge demand from richer countries from the U.S. to China.

“Johnson & Johnson’s public commitment has been really strong in terms of assisting developing countries,” said Aspen Chief Executive Officer Stephen Saad, who is self-isolating at home after two family members tested positive for Covid-19. “It’s good to get that manufacturing in South Africa.”

Aspen shares jumped as much as 8.1%, the biggest intraday gain in almost two months, and traded 6.7% higher at 112.64 rand as of 11:42 a.m. in Johannesburg.

South Africa had been looking to sign a deal to help produce a vaccine earlier in the year, when The Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations, a global organization funding vaccine development, said it was considering state-owned Biovac Institute as a fill-finish site. South Africa is also a host country for clinical trials of various vaccines.

“The fact that we are involved in all these trials is really positive about our ability to manage,” Saad said. “We’ve got good clinical expertise. I think a lot of it is built up around some of the communicable diseases we’ve had such as HIV/AIDS.”

J&J’s vaccine candidate would be made and packaged at a plant in which Aspen has invested about 3 billion rand ($184 million). The South African company relocated the production of drugs for late-stage cancer, Parkinson’s disease and some auto-immune illnesses to the southern coastal city of Port Elizabeth from Europe in 2018.

The deal remains subject to discussions around technology-transfer activities and commercial-manufacturing terms, Aspen said.

The move marks the second time the pharma group has found a way to generate business from the coronavirus. The company also makes the generic anti-inflammatory drug dexamethasone, which was found to be an effective treatment for Covid-19 earlier in the year.

 

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Medical companies Pfizer and BioNTech have announced the enrolment of South Africa for phase 3 of their Covid-19 vaccine trial.

The recently expanded study will include approximately 44,000 global participants, allowing a further increase in trial population diversity, and include people with chronic, stable HIV (human immunodeficiency viruses), Hepatitis C, or Hepatitis B infection.

The expanded study will also provide additional safety and efficacy data.

Pfizer said that the selection of South Africa as one of the global hosts of the study was based on the local scientific expertise and capabilities, the epidemiology of the disease, and South Africa’s prior experience in running clinical trials.

The study will include approximately 800 participants and will be conducted in four sites across Gauteng, Limpopo and the Western Cape. The trials received regulatory approval from the South African Health Products Regulatory Authority (Sahpra) on 22 September 2020.

Dr Essack Mitha will be the study’s national principal investigator. Mitha has more than 16 years’ experience in research and development (clinical trials) in the medical and pharmaceutical sectors.

“We are proud and excited to be given the opportunity to take part in this global research effort. South African patients will play a critical role in the fight against Covid-19.

“We are confident that the South African sites will contribute high-quality data to this ground-breaking study, and that medical science will prevail in this pandemic,” said Dr Mitha.

Having secured regulatory approval from the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to proceed with the phase 3 clinical trials of the vaccine trial, Pfizer and BioNtech have commenced and have already recruited more than 35,000 participants globally.

“As Pfizer, we are proud to be bringing this important study to the country, and to the African Continent, to add to the growing knowledge of this virus so we can find a lasting and sustainable solution to end this pandemic,” said Dr Bha Ndungane-Tlakula, Pfizer’s medical director for South Africa.

Increasing Covid-19 numbers

The Gauteng Department of Health meanwhile, is concerned about the 6% increase in the number of Covid-19 active cases since the country moved to level 1 of the lockdown.

South Africa moved to level 1 of the lockdown on 21 September 2020.

Gauteng remains the epicentre of the virus with 219,373 cases to date followed by KwaZulu-Natal with 118,889, the Western Cape 110,541 and Eastern Cape 89,076.

“The rise in infections has been attributed to among other factors to non-adherence to non-pharmaceutical interventions by some members of the public,” the provincial department said.

The areas of concerns include Johannesburg’s Inner City, Soweto, Sedibeng and Tshwane.

“It is important that we emphasise to the public that the fight against COVID-19 is far from over. We want to caution communities that we need to continue adhering to non-pharmaceutical interventions,” said Gauteng acting MEC of Health, Jacob Mamabolo.

The MEC called on everyone to play their part by wearing facemasks, social distancing, sanitising and washing hands.

According to the provincial department, 1,200 people are currently hospitalised in public and private health facilities.

Meanwhile, South Africa recorded 903 new COVID-19 cases in the last 24 hours bringing the cumulative number of detected infections to 672,572.

In addition, 81 more people succumbed to the respiratory disease pushing the death toll to 16,667.

Of the latest deaths, 28 are from Gauteng, 11 from KwaZulu-Natal, 10 from the Northern Cape, eight from the Eastern Cape and the North West, six from the Western Cape, and five from Limpopo and Free State.

“We extend our condolences to the loved ones of the departed and thank the healthcare workers that treated the deceased patients,” said health minister, Dr Zweli Mkhize.

Meanwhile, recoveries now stand at 605,520 which translates to 90%.

The data is based on the 4 164 491 tests conducted of which 12,011 were performed since the last report.

Globally, there have been 33,249 563 confirmed cases of Covid-19, while the death toll has now surpassed 1 million, the World Health Organisation reported.

 

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