India unveils vaccine for diarrhoea virus
INDIA: Scientists unveiled Tuesday an affordable vaccine
against a deadly diarrhoea - causing virus that kills over 100,000 children in
India every year.
Rotavirus, which causes dehydration and severe diarrhoea, is
globally responsible for around 453,000 deaths annually and is particularly
threatening in Africa and Asia, where access to urgent healthcare is often out
of reach.
K. Vijaraghavan, secretary of India's Department of
Biotechnology which steered the hunt for an affordable rotavirus vaccine, said
it was a product of international cooperation, although it has yet to be
approved by New Delhi.
“The result is a world-class vaccine for India's children,”
he told a press conference in New Delhi.
“For the first time we have taken a vaccine from the
earliest discovery to every stage of development and that is a very remarkable
thing for India,” he said, adding that the dollar-a-dose oral vaccine was ready
for production.
The vaccine named Rotavac will be manufactured by
Hyderabad-based Bharat Biotech pharmaceutical firm which has said it has the
capacity to mass produce 60 million doses after clearance is given. Each
vaccination consists of three doses.
Rotavirus is blamed for causing up to 884,000
hospitalisations in India a year, at a cost to the country of 3.4 billion
rupees ($72 million), scientists say.
“We have (now) added to our know-how and capacity in ways
which will pay dividends for development of future solutions,” said
Vijaraghavan.
Each dose of licenced vaccines from GlaxoSmithKline and Merc
cost around 1,000 rupees ($18), said Sushmita Malaviya of PATH, an
international healthcare organisation which is also part of the Rotavac
programme.
M.K. Bhan, who pioneered the project after local scientists
discovered a localised rotavirus 23 years ago in a New Delhi hospital, said the
development was a boon for India's creaky public health service.
“Total 25 percent of all diarrhoeal admissions would be
prevented by this and that means you will have 25 percent less diarrhoeal
illnesses of severe nature in India which is a very substantial public health
gain,” he said.
“We have a good vaccine which will be useful and we will do
post-marketing surveillance and keep accumulating more experience.” More than
300,000 babies die within 24 hours of being born in India each year from
infections and other preventable causes, according to a report last week by
Save the Children.
AFP
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