Nigeria Expects To Approve Covid-19 Vaccines First Quarter Of 2021 1
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Nigeria Expects To Approve Covid-19 Vaccines First Quarter Of 2021

The West African nation’s drugs regulator has said that Nigeria expects to license by April one of the vaccines under development globally for Covid-19.

According to the National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control Director-General, Mojisola Adeyeye in an interview on Wednesday; she said, “We are looking at the end of the first quarter of next year or the beginning of the second quarter” to approve a shot for use in Nigeria,

Nigeria is also expected to benefit from the World Health Organization-backed Covax initiative, which is working to improve access to vaccines for 92 low- and medium-income countries, Adeyeye said. The Covax partnership is also operating on a similar timeline for licensing its first coronavirus vaccine, she said.

While Nigeria has recorded only 71,000 cases of Covid-19 and fewer than 1,200 deaths from the illness, cases of the disease have been climbing again this month, with 550 cases registered on Dec. 8. However, testing rates have been low with about 810,000 performed in a country with a population of more than 200 million.

Adeleye added that, “The Covax facility will supply vaccines for 20% of the population,”

“Nigeria will need to procure theirs from whichever company they want or whichever company NAFDAC certifies” to meet the needs of the rest of the population.

“Nafdac has introduced guidelines to accelerate the licensing of Covid-19 vaccines that have already been approved by regulators including the U.S. Food and Drug Administration or the U.K.’s Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency, she said. The expedited review should take 15 days instead of several months, according to Adeyeye. WHO-approved shots will also undergo the fast-track process,” she said.

Although the vaccine manufacturers are yet to submit applications to NAFDAC, Nigerian officials met with Pfizer Inc. several months ago, as well as the makers of Russia’s Sputnik V vaccine when they were starting Phase III clinical trials, Adeyeye said.

“We told them that until the data is very robust we cannot register their product or even start the process,” she said.

“The Nigerian regulator hasn’t received any data on shots being produced by Chinese companies, in comparison to the information published by western firms such as Pfizer, Moderna Inc. and AstraZeneca Plc.”

“We don’t know much about the vaccine from China,” Adeyeye said. “If it has been tested in the public arena, in the scientific arena, if it has been submitted to WHO, yes we will welcome any product from China.”

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