Trump Seeks Push to Velocity Vaccine, Regardless of Security Issues

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Trump Seeks Push to Velocity Vaccine, Regardless of Security Issues

WASHINGTON — President Trump is urgent his well being officers to pursue a crash growth program for a coronavirus vaccine regardless of widespread


WASHINGTON — President Trump is urgent his well being officers to pursue a crash growth program for a coronavirus vaccine regardless of widespread skepticism that such an effort may succeed and appreciable concern concerning the implications for security.

The White Home has made no public announcement of the brand new effort, known as Operation Warp Velocity, and a few officers are apparently attempting to speak the president down, telling him that it might be extra dangerous to set an unreasonably quick deadline that may end in a defective vaccine than to attend for one that’s proved secure and efficient.

Mr. Trump’s order came after he grew frustrated by warnings from Dr. Anthony S. Fauci, the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, and other experts on the coronavirus task force, that development of a vaccine would take a year to 18 months, and that even that schedule might be ambitious. He told Alex M. Azar II, the health and human services secretary, to come up with a faster program.

According to one official, the idea would be to indemnify the major pharmaceutical and biotechnology companies from liability if the vaccines cause sickness or death, and to involve the Pentagon in the testing program. But most of the military’s efforts have focused on defenses against biological weapons, not viruses that arise naturally or are transmitted by community spread.

Most of that money is for research and clinical trials; Moderna is headed into Phase 2 trials. Last week Johnson & Johnson, which hopes to begin trials of its most promising potential vaccine at latest by the first week of September, announced that it had struck a deal with a firm called Emergent BioSolutions in Maryland, to mass produce its product — even though it is far from approval. Emergent BioSolutions was essentially created by the government years ago to provide a manufacturing base for vaccines in case of an emergency.

Mr. Trump, in the middle of a re-election campaign, may be satisfied with declarations that a vaccine is coming soon. And even before any vaccine receives formal approval, it could be designated for “emergency use,” meaning that it could be given to health professionals.

When companies say that it will take at least a year to 18 months to develop a vaccine, they are sometimes counting from January — when China provided the genetic code of the virus — and sometimes from when the firms began to work toward a solution.

But the timing is not completely within their control. Much depends on the success of the trials and review by the Food and Drug Administration. Most other countries have a similar process.

In more normal times, a vaccine can take upward of a decade to get through all the regulatory approvals. Some officials note the dangers of rushing: During the Ford administration, a rushed vaccine for swine flu caused several dozen deaths and damaging side effects.

But Mr. Trump has made no secret of his impatience with the warnings, from Dr. Fauci and others, about how long it takes to prove both the safety and the efficacy of a vaccine through clinical trials. In a meeting with pharmaceutical and biotechnology executives on March 2, before deaths from the virus started mounting in large numbers, Mr. Trump interrupted several times to ask how long it would take for each of the executives to get into production.

“So you’re talking over the next few months, you think you could have a vaccine,” Mr. Trump said to one executive. He answered: “Correct. Correct. With Phase 2.”

Dr. Fauci intervened: “Yeah, you won’t have a vaccine. You’ll have a vaccine to go into testing.” Then he added, “A year to a year and a half.”

Mr. Trump responded: “A couple of months, right? I mean, I like the sound of a couple of months better, I must be honest with you.”

Sheryl Gay Stolberg contributed reporting.



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