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Wikipedia

COVID-19 vaccine

A COVID‑19 vaccine is a vaccine intended to provide acquired immunity against severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS‑CoV‑2), the virus that causes coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID‑19).

COVID-19 vaccine
Vaccine description
TargetSARS‑CoV‑2
Vaccine typemrna, viral, inactivated, protein
Clinical data
Routes of
administration
Intramuscular
ATC code
Identifiers
ChemSpider
  • none

How COVID-19 vaccines work. The video shows the process of vaccination, from injection with RNA or viral vector vaccines, to uptake and translation, and on to immune system stimulation and effect.

Prior to the COVID‑19 pandemic, an established body of knowledge existed about the structure and function of coronaviruses causing diseases like severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) and Middle East respiratory syndrome (MERS). This knowledge accelerated the development of various vaccine platforms during early 2020.[1] The initial focus of SARS-CoV-2 vaccines was on preventing symptomatic, often severe illness.[2] In January 2020, the SARS-CoV-2 genetic sequence data was shared through GISAID, and by March 2020, the global pharmaceutical industry announced a major commitment to address COVID‑19.[3] In 2020, the first COVID‑19 vaccines were developed and made available to the public through emergency authorizations[4] and conditional approvals.[5][6] Initially, most COVID‑19 vaccines were two-dose vaccines, with the sole exception being the single-dose Janssen COVID-19 vaccine.[4] However, immunity from the vaccines has been found to wane over time, requiring people to get booster doses of the vaccine to maintain protection against COVID‑19.[4]

The COVID‑19 vaccines are widely credited for their role in reducing the spread of COVID‑19 and reducing the severity and death caused by COVID‑19.[4][7] According to a June 2022 study, COVID‑19 vaccines prevented an additional 14.4 to 19.8 million deaths in 185 countries and territories from 8 December 2020 to 8 December 2021.[8][9] Many countries implemented phased distribution plans that prioritized those at highest risk of complications, such as the elderly, and those at high risk of exposure and transmission, such as healthcare workers.[10][11]

Common side effects of COVID‑19 vaccines include soreness, redness, rash, inflammation at the injection site, fatigue, headache, myalgia (muscle pain), and arthralgia (joint pain), which resolve without medical treatment within a few days.[12][13] COVID-19 vaccination is safe for people who are breastfeeding.[14]

As of 27 December 2022, 13.16 billion doses of COVID‑19 vaccines have been administered worldwide based on official reports from national public health agencies.[15] By December 2020, more than 10 billion vaccine doses had been preordered by countries,[16] with about half of the doses purchased by high-income countries comprising 14% of the world's population.[17] Despite the extremely rapid development of effective mRNA and viral vector vaccines, worldwide vaccine equity has not been achieved. The development and use of whole inactivated virus (WIV) and protein-based vaccines have also been recommended, especially for use in developing countries.[18][19] The United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has now authorized bivalent vaccines to protect against the original COVID-19 strain and its Omicron variant.[20]

Background

 
A US airman receiving a COVID‑19 vaccine, December 2020
 
Map of countries by approval status
  Approved for general use, mass vaccination underway
  EUA (or equivalent) granted, mass vaccination underway
  EUA granted, mass vaccination planned
  No data available

Prior to COVID‑19, a vaccine for an infectious disease had never been produced in less than several years – and no vaccine existed for preventing a coronavirus infection in humans.[21] However, vaccines have been produced against several animal diseases caused by coronaviruses, including (as of 2003) infectious bronchitis virus in birds, canine coronavirus, and feline coronavirus.[22] Previous projects to develop vaccines for viruses in the family Coronaviridae that affect humans have been aimed at severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) and Middle East respiratory syndrome (MERS). Vaccines against SARS[23] and MERS[24] have been tested in non-human animals.

According to studies published in 2005 and 2006, the identification and development of novel vaccines and medicines to treat SARS was a priority for governments and public health agencies around the world at that time.[25][26][27] There is no cure or protective vaccine proven to be safe and effective against SARS in humans.[28][29] There is also no proven vaccine against MERS.[30] When MERS became prevalent, it was believed that existing SARS research might provide a useful template for developing vaccines and therapeutics against a MERS-CoV infection.[28][31] As of March 2020, there was one (DNA-based) MERS vaccine which completed Phase I clinical trials in humans,[32] and three others in progress, all being viral-vectored vaccines: two adenoviral-vectored (ChAdOx1-MERS, BVRS-GamVac) and one MVA-vectored (MVA-MERS-S).[33]

Vaccines that use an inactive or weakened virus that has been grown in eggs typically take more than a decade to develop.[34][35] In contrast, mRNA is a molecule that can be made quickly, and research on mRNA to fight diseases was begun decades before the COVID‑19 pandemic by scientists such as Drew Weissman and Katalin Karikó, who tested on mice. Moderna began human testing of an mRNA vaccine in 2015.[34] Viral vector vaccines were also developed for the COVID‑19 pandemic after the technology was previously cleared for Ebola.[34]

As multiple COVID‑19 vaccines have been authorized or licensed for use, real-world vaccine effectiveness (RWE) is being assessed using case control and observational studies.[36][37] A study is investigating the long-lasting protection against SARS-CoV-2 provided by the mRNA vaccines.[38][39]

Vaccine technologies

 
Conceptual diagram showing three vaccine types for forming SARS‑CoV‑2 proteins to prompt an immune response: (1) RNA vaccine, (2) subunit vaccine, (3) viral vector vaccine
 
Vaccine platforms being employed for SARS-CoV-2. Whole virus vaccines include both attenuated and inactivated forms of the virus. Protein and peptide subunit vaccines are usually combined with an adjuvant in order to enhance immunogenicity. The main emphasis in SARS-CoV-2 vaccine development has been on using the whole spike protein in its trimeric form, or components of it, such as the RBD region. Multiple non-replicating viral vector vaccines have been developed, particularly focused on adenovirus, while there has been less emphasis on the replicating viral vector constructs.[40]

As of July 2021, at least nine different technology platforms are under research and development to create an effective vaccine against COVID‑19.[41][42] Most of the platforms of vaccine candidates in clinical trials are focused on the coronavirus spike protein (S protein) and its variants as the primary antigen of COVID‑19 infection,[41] since the S protein triggers strong B-cell and T-cell immune responses.[43][44] However, other coronavirus proteins are also being investigated for vaccine development, like the nucleocapsid, because they also induce a robust T-cell response and their genes are more conserved and recombine less frequently (compared to Spike).[44][45][46] Future generations of COVID-19 vaccines that may target more and conserved genomic regions will also act as an insurance against the manifestation of catastrophic scenarios concerning the future evolutionary path of SARS-CoV-2, or any similar Coronavirus epidemic/pandemic.[47]

Platforms developed in 2020 involved nucleic acid technologies (nucleoside-modified messenger RNA and DNA), non-replicating viral vectors, peptides, recombinant proteins, live attenuated viruses, and inactivated viruses.[21][41][48][49]

Many vaccine technologies being developed for COVID‑19 are not like vaccines already in use to prevent influenza, but rather are using "next-generation" strategies for precise targeting of COVID‑19 infection mechanisms.[41][48][49] Several of the synthetic vaccines use a 2P mutation to lock the spike protein into its prefusion configuration, stimulating an adaptive immune response to the virus before it attaches to a human cell.[50] Vaccine platforms in development may improve flexibility for antigen manipulation, and effectiveness for targeting mechanisms of COVID‑19 infection in susceptible population subgroups, such as healthcare workers, the elderly, children, pregnant women, and people with weakened immune systems.[41][48]

mRNA vaccines

 
Diagram of the operation of an RNA vaccine. Messenger RNA contained in the vaccine enters cells and is translated into foreign proteins, which trigger an immune response.

Several COVID‑19 vaccines, including the Pfizer–BioNTech and Moderna vaccines, have been developed to use RNA to stimulate an immune response. When introduced into human tissue, the vaccine contains either self-replicating RNA or messenger RNA (mRNA), which both cause cells to express the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein. This teaches the body how to identify and destroy the corresponding pathogen. RNA vaccines often, but not always, use nucleoside-modified messenger RNA. The delivery of mRNA is achieved by a coformulation of the molecule into lipid nanoparticles which protect the RNA strands and help their absorption into the cells.[51][52][53][54]

RNA vaccines are the first COVID‑19 vaccines to be authorized in the United Kingdom, the United States and the European Union.[55][56] Authorized vaccines of this type are the Pfizer–BioNTech[57][58][59] and Moderna vaccines.[60][61] The CVnCoV RNA vaccine from CureVac failed in clinical trials.[62]

Severe allergic reactions are rare. In December 2020, 1,893,360 first doses of Pfizer–BioNTech COVID‑19 vaccine administration resulted in 175 cases of severe allergic reaction, of which 21 were anaphylaxis.[63] For 4,041,396 Moderna COVID‑19 vaccine dose administrations in December 2020 and January 2021, only ten cases of anaphylaxis were reported.[63] Lipid nanoparticles (LNPs) were most likely responsible for the allergic reactions.[63]

Adenovirus vector vaccines

These vaccines are examples of non-replicating viral vector vaccines, using an adenovirus shell containing DNA that encodes a SARS‑CoV‑2 protein.[64][65] The viral vector-based vaccines against COVID‑19 are non-replicating, meaning that they do not make new virus particles, but rather produce only the antigen which elicits a systemic immune response.[64]

Authorized vaccines of this type are the Oxford–AstraZeneca COVID‑19 vaccine,[66][67][68] the Sputnik V COVID‑19 vaccine,[69] Convidecia, and the Janssen COVID‑19 vaccine.[70][71]

Convidecia and the Janssen COVID‑19 vaccine are both one-shot vaccines which offer less complicated logistics and can be stored under ordinary refrigeration for several months.[72][73]

Sputnik V uses Ad26 for its first dose, which is the same as Janssen's only dose, and Ad5 for the second dose, which is the same as Convidecia's only dose.[74]

In August 2021, the developers of Sputnik V proposed, in view of the Delta case surge, that Pfizer test the Ad26 component (termed its 'Light' version)[75] as a booster shot:

Delta cases surge in US & Israel shows mRNA vaccines need a heterogeneous booster to strengthen & prolong immune response. #SputnikV pioneered mix&match approach, combo trials & showed 83.1% efficacy vs Delta. Today RDIF offers Pfizer to start trial with Sputnik Light as booster.[76]

Inactivated virus vaccines

Inactivated vaccines consist of virus particles that are grown in culture and then killed using a method such as heat or formaldehyde to lose disease producing capacity, while still stimulating an immune response.[77]

Authorized vaccines of this type are the Chinese CoronaVac[78][79][80] and the Sinopharm BIBP[81] and WIBP vaccines; the Indian Covaxin; later this year the Russian CoviVac;[82] the Kazakh vaccine QazVac;[83] and the Iranian COVIran Barekat.[84] Vaccines in clinical trials include the Valneva COVID‑19 vaccine.[85][unreliable source?][86]

Subunit vaccines

Subunit vaccines present one or more antigens without introducing whole pathogen particles. The antigens involved are often protein subunits, but can be any molecule that is a fragment of the pathogen.[87]

The authorized vaccines of this type are Novavax COVID‑19 vaccine,[88], the peptide vaccine EpiVacCorona,[89] ZF2001,[42] MVC-COV1901,[90] Corbevax,[91][92], the Sanofi–GSK vaccine [93][94], and Soberana 02 (a conjugate vaccine).[95]

The V451 vaccine was in clinical trials that were terminated after it was found that the vaccine may potentially cause incorrect results for subsequent HIV testing.[96][97]

Other types

Additional types of vaccines that are in clinical trials include virus-like particle vaccines, multiple DNA plasmid vaccines,[98][99][100][101][102][103] at least two lentivirus vector vaccines,[104][105] a conjugate vaccine, and a vesicular stomatitis virus displaying the SARS‑CoV‑2 spike protein.[106]

Scientists investigated whether existing vaccines for unrelated conditions could prime the immune system and lessen the severity of COVID‑19 infection.[107] There is experimental evidence that the BCG vaccine for tuberculosis has non-specific effects on the immune system, but no evidence that this vaccine is effective against COVID‑19.[108]

List of authorized vaccines

COVID-19 vaccines authorized for emergency use or approved for full use
Common name Type (technology) Country of origin First authorization Notes
Authorized in more than 10 countries
Oxford–AstraZeneca Adenovirus vector United Kingdom, Sweden December 2020
Pfizer–BioNTech RNA Germany, United States December 2020 Both original and Omicron variant versions
Janssen Adenovirus vector United States, Netherlands February 2021
Moderna RNA United States December 2020 Both original and Omicron variant versions
Sinopharm BIBP Inactivated China July 2020
Sputnik V Adenovirus vector Russia August 2020
CoronaVac Inactivated China August 2020
Novavax Subunit/virus-like particle United States December 2021 A "recombinant nanoparticle vaccine"[109]
Covaxin Inactivated India January 2021
Valneva Inactivated France, Austria April 2022
Sanofi–GSK Subunit France, United Kingdom November 2022 Based on Beta variant
Sputnik Light Adenovirus vector Russia May 2021
Authorized in 2–10 countries
Convidecia Adenovirus vector China June 2020
Sinopharm WIBP Inactivated China February 2021
Abdala Subunit Cuba July 2021
EpiVacCorona Subunit Russia October 2020
Zifivax Subunit China March 2021
Soberana 02 Subunit Cuba, Iran June 2021
CoviVac Inactivated Russia February 2021
Medigen Subunit Taiwan July 2021
QazCovid-in Inactivated Kazakhstan April 2021
Minhai Inactivated China May 2021
COVIran Barekat Inactivated Iran June 2021
Soberana Plus Subunit Cuba August 2021
Corbevax Subunit India, United States December 2021
Authorized in 1 country
Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences Inactivated China June 2021
ZyCoV-D DNA India August 2021
FAKHRAVAC Inactivated Iran September 2021
COVAX-19 Subunit Australia, Iran October 2021
Razi Cov Pars Subunit Iran October 2021
Turkovac Inactivated Turkey December 2021
Sinopharm CNBG Subunit China December 2021 Based on original, Beta, and Kappa variants
CoVLP Virus-like particle Canada, United Kingdom February 2022
Noora Subunit Iran March 2022
Skycovione Subunit South Korea June 2022
Walvax RNA China September 2022
iNCOVACC Adenovirus vector India September 2022 Nasal vaccine
V-01 Subunit China September 2022
Gemcovac RNA India October 2022 Self-amplifying RNA vaccine
IndoVac Subunit Indonesia October 2022

Delivery methods

Currently, all coronavirus vaccines available, regardless of the different types of technology they are based on, are administrated by injection. However, various other types of vaccine delivery methods have been studied for future coronavirus vaccines.[110]

Intranasal

Intranasal vaccines target mucosal immunity in the nasal mucosa which is a portal for viral entrance to the body.[111][112] These vaccines are designed to stimulate nasal immune factors, such as IgA.[111] In addition to inhibiting the virus, nasal vaccines provide ease of administration because no needles (and the accompanying needle phobia) are involved.[112][113] Nasal vaccines have been approved for influenza,[112][113] but not for COVID-19.

A variety of intranasal COVID-19 vaccines are undergoing clinical trials. One is in use in China.[114] Examples include a vaccine candidate which uses a modified avian virus as a vector to target SARS-CoV-2 spike proteins and an mRNA vaccine delivered via a nasal nanoparticle spray.[115] In September 2022, India and China approved the two first nasal COVID-19 vaccines (iNCOVACC and Convidecia) which may (as boosters)[116] also reduce transmission[117][118] (potentially via sterilizing immunity).[117]

Autologous

Aivita Biomedical is developing an experimental autologous dendritic cell COVID‑19 vaccine kit where the vaccine is prepared and incubated at the point-of-care using cells from the intended recipient.[119] The vaccine is undergoing small phase I and phase II clinical studies.[119][120][121]

Universal vaccine

A universal coronavirus vaccine is effective against all coronavirus (and possibly other) viruses.[122][123] The concept was publicly endorsed by NIAID director Anthony Fauci, virologist Jeffery K. Taubenberger, and David M. Morens.[124] In March 2022, the White House released the "National COVID-19 Preparedness Plan", which recommended to accelerate development of such vaccines.[125]

One strategy for developing such vaccines was developed at Walter Reed Army Institute of Research (WRAIR). It uses a spike ferritin-based nanoparticle (SpFN). This vaccine began a Phase I clinical trial in April 2022.[126]

Another strategy is to attach vaccine fragments from multiple strains to a nanoparticle scaffold. Universality is enhanced by targeting the receptor-binding domain rather than the spike protein.[127]

Formulation

As of September 2020, eleven of the vaccine candidates in clinical development use adjuvants to enhance immunogenicity.[41] An immunological adjuvant is a substance formulated with a vaccine to elevate the immune response to an antigen, such as the COVID‑19 virus or influenza virus.[128] Specifically, an adjuvant may be used in formulating a COVID‑19 vaccine candidate to boost its immunogenicity and efficacy to reduce or prevent COVID‑19 infection in vaccinated individuals.[128][129] Adjuvants used in COVID‑19 vaccine formulation may be particularly effective for technologies using the inactivated COVID‑19 virus and recombinant protein-based or vector-based vaccines.[129] Aluminum salts, known as "alum", were the first adjuvant used for licensed vaccines, and are the adjuvant of choice in some 80% of adjuvanted vaccines.[129] The alum adjuvant initiates diverse molecular and cellular mechanisms to enhance immunogenicity, including release of proinflammatory cytokines.[128][129]

Planning and development

Since January 2020, vaccine development has been expedited via unprecedented collaboration in the multinational pharmaceutical industry and between governments.[41]

Multiple steps along the entire development path are evaluated, including:[21][130]

  • the level of acceptable toxicity of the vaccine (its safety),
  • targeting vulnerable populations,
  • the need for vaccine efficacy breakthroughs,
  • the duration of vaccination protection,
  • special delivery systems (such as oral or nasal, rather than by injection),
  • dose regimen,
  • stability and storage characteristics,
  • emergency use authorization before formal licensing,
  • optimal manufacturing for scaling to billions of doses, and
  • dissemination of the licensed vaccine.

Challenges

There have been several unique challenges with COVID‑19 vaccine development.

The urgency to create a vaccine for COVID‑19 led to compressed schedules that shortened the standard vaccine development timeline, in some cases combining clinical trial steps over months, a process typically conducted sequentially over several years.[131] Public health programs have been described as in "[a] race to vaccinate individuals" with the early wave vaccines.[132]

Timelines for conducting clinical research – normally a sequential process requiring years – are being compressed into safety, efficacy, and dosing trials running simultaneously over months, potentially compromising safety assurance.[131][133] As an example, Chinese vaccine developers and the government Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention began their efforts in January 2020,[134] and by March were pursuing numerous candidates on short timelines, with the goal to showcase Chinese technology strengths over those of the United States, and to reassure the Chinese people about the quality of vaccines produced in China.[131][135]

The rapid development and urgency of producing a vaccine for the COVID‑19 pandemic was expected to increase the risks and failure rate of delivering a safe, effective vaccine.[48][49][136] Additionally, research at universities is obstructed by physical distancing and closing of laboratories.[137][138]

Vaccines must progress through several phases of clinical trials to test for safety, immunogenicity, effectiveness, dose levels and adverse effects of the candidate vaccine.[139][140] Vaccine developers have to invest resources internationally to find enough participants for Phase II–III clinical trials when the virus has proved to be a "moving target" of changing transmission rates across and within countries, forcing companies to compete for trial participants.[141] Clinical trial organizers also may encounter people unwilling to be vaccinated due to vaccine hesitancy[142] or disbelief in the science of the vaccine technology and its ability to prevent infection.[143] As new vaccines are developed during the COVID‑19 pandemic, licensure of COVID‑19 vaccine candidates requires submission of a full dossier of information on development and manufacturing quality.[144][145][146]

Organizations

Internationally, the Access to COVID‑19 Tools Accelerator is a G20 and World Health Organization (WHO) initiative announced in April 2020.[147][148] It is a cross-discipline support structure to enable partners to share resources and knowledge. It comprises four pillars, each managed by two to three collaborating partners: Vaccines (also called "COVAX"), Diagnostics, Therapeutics, and Health Systems Connector.[149] The WHO's April 2020 "R&D Blueprint (for the) novel Coronavirus" documented a "large, international, multi-site, individually randomized controlled clinical trial" to allow "the concurrent evaluation of the benefits and risks of each promising candidate vaccine within 3–6 months of it being made available for the trial." The WHO vaccine coalition will prioritize which vaccines should go into Phase II and III clinical trials, and determine harmonized Phase III protocols for all vaccines achieving the pivotal trial stage.[150]

National governments have also been involved in vaccine development. Canada announced funding of 96 projects for development and production of vaccines at Canadian companies and universities with plans to establish a "vaccine bank" that could be used if another coronavirus outbreak occurs,[151] and to support clinical trials and develop manufacturing and supply chains for vaccines.[152]

China provided low-rate loans to one vaccine developer through its central bank, and "quickly made land available for the company" to build production plants.[133] Three Chinese vaccine companies and research institutes are supported by the government for financing research, conducting clinical trials, and manufacturing.[153]

The United Kingdom government formed a COVID‑19 vaccine task force in April 2020 to stimulate local efforts for accelerated development of a vaccine through collaborations of industry, universities, and government agencies. The UK's Vaccine Taskforce contributed to every phase of development from research to manufacturing.[154]

In the United States, the Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority (BARDA), a federal agency funding disease-fighting technology, announced investments to support American COVID‑19 vaccine development, and manufacture of the most promising candidates.[133][155] In May 2020, the government announced funding for a fast-track program called Operation Warp Speed.[156][157] By March 2021, BARDA had funded an estimated $19.3 billion in COVID‑19 vaccine development.[158]

Large pharmaceutical companies with experience in making vaccines at scale, including Johnson & Johnson, AstraZeneca, and GlaxoSmithKline (GSK), formed alliances with biotechnology companies, governments, and universities to accelerate progression toward effective vaccines.[133][131]

Clinical research

COVID-19 vaccine clinical research uses clinical research to establish the characteristics of COVID-19 vaccines. These characteristics include efficacy, effectiveness and safety. As of November 2022, 40 vaccines are authorized by at least one national regulatory authority for public use:[159][160]

As of June 2022, 353 vaccine candidates are in various stages of development, with 135 in clinical research, including 38 in phase I trials, 32 in phase I–II trials, 39 in phase III trials, and 9 in phase IV development.[159]

Post-vaccination complications

Post-vaccination embolic and thrombotic events, termed vaccine-induced immune thrombotic thrombocytopenia (VITT),[161][162][163][164][165] vaccine-induced prothrombotic immune thrombocytopenia (VIPIT),[166] thrombosis with thrombocytopenia syndrome (TTS),[167][164][165] vaccine-induced immune thrombocytopenia and thrombosis (VITT),[165] or vaccine-associated thrombotic thrombocytopenia (VATT),[165] are rare types of blood clotting syndromes that were initially observed in a number of people who had previously received the Oxford–AstraZeneca COVID‑19 vaccine (AZD1222)[a] during the COVID‑19 pandemic.[166][172] It was subsequently also described in the Janssen COVID‑19 vaccine (Johnson & Johnson) leading to suspension of its use until its safety had been reassessed.[173] On 5 May 2022 the FDA posted a bulletin limiting the use of the Janssen Vaccine to very specific cases due to further reassesment of the risks of TTS, although the FDA also stated in the same bulletin that the benefits of the vaccine outweigh the risks.[174]

In April 2021, AstraZeneca and the European Medicines Agency (EMA) updated their information for healthcare professionals about AZD1222, saying it is "considered plausible" that there is a causal relationship between the vaccination and the occurrence of thrombosis in combination with thrombocytopenia and that, "although such adverse reactions are very rare, they exceeded what would be expected in the general population".[172][175][176][177]

History

 
COVID‑19 vaccine research samples in a NIAID lab freezer (30 January 2020)

SARS-CoV-2 (severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2), the virus that causes COVID-19, was isolated in late 2019.[178] Its genetic sequence was published on 11 January 2020, triggering the urgent international response to prepare for an outbreak and hasten development of a preventive COVID-19 vaccine.[179][180][181] Since 2020, vaccine development has been expedited via unprecedented collaboration in the multinational pharmaceutical industry and between governments.[182] By June 2020, tens of billions of dollars were invested by corporations, governments, international health organizations, and university research groups to develop dozens of vaccine candidates and prepare for global vaccination programs to immunize against COVID‑19 infection.[180][183][184][185] According to the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations (CEPI), the geographic distribution of COVID‑19 vaccine development shows North American entities to have about 40% of the activity, compared to 30% in Asia and Australia, 26% in Europe, and a few projects in South America and Africa.[179][182]

In February 2020, the World Health Organization (WHO) said it did not expect a vaccine against SARS‑CoV‑2 to become available in less than 18 months.[186] Virologist Paul Offit commented that, in hindsight, the development of a safe and effective vaccine within 11 months was a remarkable feat.[187] The rapidly growing infection rate of COVID‑19 worldwide during 2020 stimulated international alliances and government efforts to urgently organize resources to make multiple vaccines on shortened timelines,[188] with four vaccine candidates entering human evaluation in March (see COVID-19 vaccine § Trial and authorization status).[179][189]

On 24 June 2020, China approved the CanSino vaccine for limited use in the military, and two inactivated virus vaccines for emergency use in high-risk occupations.[190] On 11 August 2020, Russia announced the approval of its Sputnik V vaccine for emergency use, though one month later only small amounts of the vaccine had been distributed for use outside of the phase 3 trial.[191]

The Pfizer–BioNTech partnership submitted an Emergency Use Authorization (EUA) request to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for the mRNA vaccine BNT162b2 (active ingredient tozinameran) on 20 November 2020.[192][193] On 2 December 2020, the United Kingdom's Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) gave temporary regulatory approval for the Pfizer–BioNTech vaccine,[194][195] becoming the first country to approve the vaccine and the first country in the Western world to approve the use of any COVID‑19 vaccine.[196][197][198] As of 21 December 2020, many countries and the European Union[199] had authorized or approved the Pfizer–BioNTech COVID‑19 vaccine. Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates granted emergency marketing authorization for the Sinopharm BIBP vaccine.[200][201] On 11 December 2020, the FDA granted an EUA for the Pfizer–BioNTech COVID‑19 vaccine.[202] A week later, they granted an EUA for mRNA-1273 (active ingredient elasomeran), the Moderna vaccine.[203][204][205][206]

On 31 March 2021, the Russian government announced that they had registered the first COVID‑19 vaccine for animals.[207] Named Carnivac-Cov, it is an inactivated vaccine for carnivorous animals, including pets, aimed at preventing mutations that occur during the interspecies transmission of SARS-CoV-2.[208]

In October 2022 China began administering an oral vaccine developed by CanSino Bioligics, using its adenovirus model.[209]

Despite the availability of mRNA and viral vector vaccines, worldwide vaccine equity has not been achieved. The ongoing development and use of whole inactivated virus (WIV) and protein-based vaccines has been recommended, especially for use in developing countries, to dampen further waves of the pandemic.[210][211]

In November 2021, the full nucleotide sequences of the AstraZeneca and Pfizer/BioNTech vaccines were released by the UK Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency, in response to a freedom of information request.[212][213]

Effectiveness

As of August 2021, studies reported that the COVID-19 vaccines available in the United States are "highly protective against severe illness, hospitalization, and death due to COVID-19".[214] In comparison with fully vaccinated people, the CDC reported that unvaccinated people were 10 times more likely to be hospitalized and 11 times more likely to die.[215][216]

CDC reported that vaccine effectiveness fell from 91% against Alpha to 66% against Delta.[217] One expert stated that "those who are infected following vaccination are still not getting sick and not dying like was happening before vaccination."[218] By late August 2021 the Delta variant accounted for 99 percent of U.S. cases and was found to double the risk of severe illness and hospitalization for those not yet vaccinated.[219]

A September 2021 study found that having two doses of a[which?] COVID-19 vaccine halved the odds of long COVID.[220]

In November 2021, a study by the ECDC estimated that 470,000 lives over the age of 60 had been saved since the start of vaccination roll-out in the European region.[221]

On 10 December 2021, the UK Health Security Agency reported that early data indicated a 20- to 40-fold reduction in neutralizing activity for Omicron by sera from Pfizer 2-dose vaccinees relative to earlier strains. After a booster dose (usually with an mRNA vaccine),[222] vaccine effectiveness against symptomatic disease was at 70%–75%, and the effectiveness against severe disease was expected to be higher.[223]

According to early December 2021 CDC data, "unvaccinated adults were about 97 times more likely to die from COVID-19 than fully vaccinated people who had received boosters".[224]

A meta analysis looking into COVID-19 vaccine differences in immunosuppressed individuals found that people with a weakened immune system, are less able to produce neutralizing antibodies. For example, organ transplant recipients needing three vaccines to achieve seroconversion.[225] A study on the serologic response to mRNA vaccines among patients with lymphoma, leukemia and myeloma found that one-quarter of patients did not produce measurable antibodies, varying by cancer type.[226]

An April 2022 study suggested that natural immunity may offer similar protection from mild and severe cases of COVID-19 as the vaccines.[227][228]

Duration of immunity

As of 2021, available evidence shows that fully vaccinated individuals and those previously infected with SARS-CoV-2 have a low risk of subsequent infection for at least six months.[229][230][231] There is insufficient data to determine an antibody titer threshold that indicates when an individual is protected from infection.[229] Multiple studies show that antibody titers are associated with protection at the population level, but individual protection titers remain unknown.[229] For some populations, such as the elderly and the immunocompromised, protection levels may be reduced after both vaccination and infection.[229] Available evidence indicates that the level of protection may not be the same for all variants of the virus.[229]

As of December 2021, there are no FDA-authorized or approved tests that providers or the public can use to reliably determine if a person is protected from infection.[229]

As of March 2022, elderly residents' protection against severe illness, hospitalization and death in English care homes was high immediately after vaccination, but protection declined significantly in the months following vaccination.[232] Protection among care home staff, who were younger, declined much more slowly.[232] Regular boosters are recommended for older people and boosters every six months for care home residents appear reasonable.[232]

The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) recommends a fourth dose of the Pfizer mRNA vaccine as of March 2022, for "certain immunocompromised individuals and people over the age of 50".[233][234]

Immune evasion by variants

In contrast to other investigated prior variants, the SARS-CoV-2 Omicron variant[235][236][237][238][239] and its BA.4/5 subvariants[240] are evading immunity induced by vaccines, which may lead to breakthrough infections despite recent vaccination. Nevertheless, current vaccines are thought to provide a level of protection against severe illness, hospitalizations, and deaths due to Omicron.[241]

Vaccine adjustments

In June 2022, researchers, health organizations and regulators were discussing, investigating (including with preliminary laboratory studies and trials) and partly recommending COVID-19 vaccine boosters that mix the original vaccine formulation with Omicron-adjusted parts – such as spike proteins of a specific Omicron subvariant – to better prepare the immune system to recognize a wide variety of variants amid substantial and ongoing immune evasion by Omicron (and other SARS-CoV-2 variants).[242]

In June 2022 Pfizer and Moderna developed bivalent vaccines to protect against the SARS-COV-2 wild-type and the Omicron variant. The bivalent vaccines are well-tolerated and offer immunity to omicron superior to previous mRNA vaccines.[243] The United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has authorized the bivalent vaccines for use in the USA .[244]

Effectiveness against transmission

As of 2022, fully vaccinated individuals with breakthrough infections with SARS-CoV-2 delta (B.1.617.2) variant have peak viral load similar to unvaccinated cases and are able to transmit infection in household settings.[245]

Mix and match

According to studies, the combination of two different COVID‑19 vaccines, also called cross vaccination or mix-and-match method, provides protection equivalent to that of mRNA vaccines – including protection against the Delta variant. Individuals who receive the combination of two different vaccines produce strong immune responses, with side effects no worse than those caused by standard regimens.[246][247]

Adverse events

For most people, the side effects, also called adverse effects, from COVID‑19 vaccines are mild and can be managed at home.

All vaccines that are administered via intramuscular injection, including COVID‑19 vaccines, have side effects related to the mild trauma associated with the procedure and introduction of a foreign substance into the body.[248] These include soreness, redness, rash, and inflammation at the injection site. Other common side effects include fatigue, headache, myalgia (muscle pain), and arthralgia (joint pain), all of which generally resolve without medical treatment within a few days.[12][13] Also like any other vaccine, some people are allergic to one or more ingredients in COVID‑19 vaccines. Typical side effects are stronger and more common in younger people and in subsequent doses, and up to 20% of people report a disruptive level of side effects after the second dose of an mRNA vaccine.[249] These side effects are less common or weaker in inactivated vaccines.[249] Covid-19 vaccination related enlargement of lymph node happens in 11.6% of those received one dose of vaccine, and in 16% of those received two doses.[250]

COVID‑19 vaccination is safe for people who are breastfeeding.[14] Temporary changes to the menstrual cycle in young women have been reported, although these changes are "small compared with natural variation and quickly reverse".[251] In one study, women who received both doses of a two-dose vaccine during the same menstrual cycle (an atypical situation) may see their next period begin a couple of days late, and they have about twice the usual risk of a clinically significant delay (about 10% of these women, compared to about 4% of unvaccinated women).[251] Cycle lengths return to normal after two menstrual cycles post-vaccination.[251] Women who received doses in separate cycles had approximately the same natural variation in cycle lengths as unvaccinated women.[251] Other temporary menstrual effects have been reported, such as heavier than normal menstrual bleeding after vaccination.[251]

Serious adverse events associated COVID‑19 vaccines are generally rare but of high interest to the public.[252] The official databases of reported adverse events include the World Health Organization's VigiBase, the United States Vaccine Adverse Events Reporting System (VAERS) and the United Kingdom's Yellow Card Scheme. Increased public awareness of these reporting systems and the extra reporting requirements under US FDA Emergency Use Authorization rules have resulted in an increased volume of reported adverse events.[253]

Rare serious effects include:

  • anaphylaxis, which is severe type of allergic reaction.[254] Anaphylaxis affects one person per 250,000 to 400,000 doses administered.[249][255]
  • blood clots (thrombosis).[254] These vaccine-induced immune thrombocytopenia and thrombosis are associated with vaccines using an adenovirus system (Janssen and Oxford-AstraZeneca).[254] These affect about one person per 100,000.[249]
  • myocarditis and pericarditis, or inflammation of the heart.[254] There is a rare risk of myocarditis (inflammation of the heart muscle) or pericarditis (inflammation of the membrane covering the heart) after the mRNA COVID-19 vaccines (Moderna COVID-19 vaccine or the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine). The risk of myocarditis after COVID-19 vaccination is estimated to be 0.3 to 5 cases per 100,000 persons with the highest risk in young males.[256] In an Israeli nation-wide population based study (in which the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine was exclusively given), the incidence rate of myocarditis was 54 cases per 2.5 million vaccine recipients, with an overall incidence rate of 2 cases per 100,000 persons, with the highest incidence seen in young males (aged 16 to 29) at 10 cases per 100,000 vaccine recipients. Of the cases of myocarditis seen, 76% were mild in severity, with only 1 case of cardiogenic shock (heart failure) and no deaths reported due to myocarditis.[257] COVID-19 vaccines may protect against myocarditis due to subsequent COVID-19 infection as the risk of myocarditis after COVID-19 infection was 50% less in those who were vaccinated compared to unvaccinated persons.[258] The risk of myocarditis and pericarditis is significantly higher (up to 11 times higher with respect to myocarditis) after COVID-19 infection as compared to COVID-19 vaccination, with the possible exception of younger men (less than 40 years old) who may have a higher risk of myocarditis after the second Moderna mRNA vaccine (an additional 97 cases of myocarditis per 1 million persons vaccinated).[258]
  • thrombotic thrombocytopenia and other autoimmune diseases, which have been reported as adverse events after COVID-19 vaccine.[259]

There are rare reports of subjective hearing changes, including tinnitus, after vaccination.[255][260][261]

The rate and type of side effects is also compared to the alternatives. For example, although vaccination may trigger some side effects, the effects experienced from an infection could be worse. Neurological side effects from getting COVID-19 are hundreds of times more likely than from vaccination.[262]

Society and culture

Distribution

Note about table in this section: Number and percentage of people who have received at least one dose of a COVID‑19 vaccine (unless noted otherwise). May include vaccination of non-citizens, which can push totals beyond 100% of the local population. Table is updated daily by a bot.[note 2]

Updated January 12, 2023.
COVID-19 vaccine distribution by country[263]
Location Vaccinated[b] Percent[c]
  World[d][e] 5,513,925,343 69.14%
  China[f] 1,307,222,000 91.68%
  India 1,027,237,038 72.48%
  European Union[g] 338,076,320 75.10%
  United States[h] 268,546,218 80.89%
  Indonesia 204,045,153 74.06%
  Brazil 188,820,856 87.70%
  Pakistan 154,665,740 65.59%
  Bangladesh 150,472,107 87.90%
  Japan 104,574,796 84.37%
  Mexico 99,071,001 77.70%
  Vietnam 90,399,369 92.07%
  Russia 87,797,451 60.67%
  Philippines 78,359,629 67.81%
  Iran 65,113,292 73.53%
  Germany 64,851,306 77.79%
  Nigeria 63,982,167 29.28%
  Turkey 57,941,051 67.89%
  Thailand 57,005,497 79.62%
  France 54,636,743 80.57%
  United Kingdom 53,806,963 79.97%
  Egypt 53,749,907 48.43%
  Italy[i] 50,867,832 86.16%
  South Korea 44,866,783 86.59%
  Ethiopia 44,695,420 37.16%
  Colombia 42,938,872 82.78%
  Argentina 41,419,541 91.01%
  Spain 41,310,693 86.99%
  Myanmar 34,777,314 64.64%
  Canada 34,659,652 90.13%
  Peru 30,224,560 88.77%
  Tanzania 28,848,632 44.05%
  Malaysia 28,122,957 82.87%
  Nepal 27,566,723 90.24%
  Saudi Arabia 26,951,666 74.03%
  Morocco 25,015,241 66.78%
  South Africa 23,962,787 40.01%
  Poland 22,858,184 57.35%
  Australia 22,235,240 84.94%
  Venezuela 22,157,232 78.29%
  Taiwan 21,829,864 91.36%
  Uzbekistan 21,247,096 61.36%
  Uganda 18,867,075 39.93%
  Mozambique 18,581,293 56.36%
  Chile 18,083,563 92.25%
  Sri Lanka 17,143,761 78.53%
  Ukraine 15,729,617 36.19%
  Ecuador 15,318,049 85.10%
  Cambodia 15,241,969 90.90%
  Angola 14,990,131 42.12%
  Kenya 14,213,956 26.31%
  Ivory Coast 13,148,381 46.69%
  Netherlands 12,775,557 73.00%
  Ghana 12,034,108 35.95%
  Afghanistan 11,533,150 28.04%
  Iraq 11,332,925 25.47%
  Kazakhstan 10,849,289 55.93%
  Zambia 10,802,844 53.97%
  Cuba 10,720,570 95.62%
  Rwanda 10,572,981 76.75%
  Sudan 10,504,568 22.41%
  United Arab Emirates 9,991,089 100.00%
  Portugal 9,770,966 95.13%
  Belgium 9,264,433 79.48%
  Guatemala 8,859,479 49.65%
  Romania 8,183,574 41.63%
  Greece 7,932,686 76.39%
  Algeria 7,840,131 17.75%
  Sweden 7,814,933 74.08%
  Somalia 7,729,842 43.93%
  Bolivia 7,361,008 60.94%
  Dominican Republic 7,301,350 65.02%
  Tunisia 7,217,256 58.41%
  Czech Republic 6,976,284 66.48%
  Hong Kong 6,910,465 92.28%
  Austria 6,895,915 77.14%
  Israel 6,721,619 71.14%
  Belarus 6,512,843 68.30%
  Honduras 6,448,366 61.81%
  Zimbabwe 6,437,808 40.25%
  Hungary 6,420,813 64.42%
  Nicaragua 6,176,970 88.90%
  Switzerland 6,095,428 69.74%
  Guinea 6,087,292 43.92%
  Niger 5,935,299 22.65%
  Laos 5,888,649 79.31%
  Democratic Republic of the Congo 5,719,214 5.78%
  Azerbaijan 5,373,253 52.10%
  Tajikistan 5,282,863 54.18%
  Singapore 5,160,943 91.55%
  Jordan 4,821,579 43.25%
  Denmark 4,794,572 81.51%
  El Salvador 4,652,597 73.69%
  Costa Rica 4,594,450 88.68%
  Malawi 4,587,043 22.48%
  Finland 4,524,275 81.65%
  Burkina Faso 4,366,726 19.26%
  Norway 4,346,995 79.99%
  Sierra Leone 4,318,136 50.18%
  New Zealand 4,300,097 82.93%
  Republic of Ireland 4,105,365 81.73%
  Paraguay 3,978,606 58.68%
  Liberia 3,825,381 72.14%
  Chad 3,749,370 21.16%
  Benin 3,697,190 27.69%
  Cameroon 3,651,727 13.08%
  Panama 3,520,586 79.86%
  Kuwait 3,455,425 80.94%
  Serbia 3,354,075 48.81%
  Oman 3,257,365 71.18%
  Mali 3,210,921 14.21%
  Syria 3,179,030 14.37%
  Uruguay 3,004,604 87.78%
  Qatar 2,850,786 105.78%
  Slovakia 2,822,919 51.82%
  Lebanon 2,740,227 49.92%
  Croatia 2,320,754 57.58%
  Libya 2,308,724 34.28%
  Mongolia 2,272,965 68.27%
  South Sudan 2,252,089 20.64%
  Togo 2,242,455 25.34%
  Bulgaria 2,104,168 31.03%
  Mauritania 2,096,578 44.27%
  Madagascar 2,056,662 6.95%
  Palestine 2,012,767 38.34%
  Central African Republic 1,984,791 35.58%
  Lithuania 1,956,499 71.14%
  Senegal 1,949,419 11.26%
  Botswana 1,687,070 64.14%
  Georgia 1,654,504 44.03%
  Kyrgyzstan 1,639,501 24.73%
  Latvia 1,346,184 71.84%
  Albania 1,340,678 47.17%
  Slovenia 1,265,802 59.72%
  Bahrain 1,241,174 84.31%
  Armenia 1,128,072 38.01%
  Mauritius 1,123,773 86.48%
  Moldova 1,103,268 33.71%
  Yemen 1,006,274 2.99%
  Lesotho 996,759 43.23%
  Bosnia and Herzegovina 943,394 28.91%
  Kosovo 906,706 50.88%
  Timor-Leste 878,845 65.52%
  Estonia 868,672 65.51%
  North Macedonia 854,392 40.81%
  Jamaica 844,553 29.87%
  Trinidad and Tobago 753,588 49.39%
  Fiji 711,682 76.54%
  Bhutan 699,116 89.35%
  Republic of the Congo 695,760 11.92%
  Macau 677,696 97.48%
  Cyprus 670,969 74.88%
  Guinea-Bissau 640,393 31.08%
  Namibia 599,175 23.34%
  Gambia 548,701 20.28%
  Guyana 493,404 61.01%
  Eswatini 492,300 41.29%
  Luxembourg 481,908 74.41%
  Malta 478,590 89.74%
  Brunei 450,404 100.31%
  Comoros 438,825 53.41%
  Haiti 402,110 3.47%
  Maldives 399,151 76.20%
  Papua New Guinea 369,998 3.65%
  Cabo Verde 356,734 60.68%
  Solomon Islands 343,821 47.47%
  Djibouti 317,428 28.32%
  Gabon 311,040 13.02%
  Iceland 309,770 84.00%
  Northern Cyprus 301,673 78.80%
  Montenegro 292,783 46.63%
  Equatorial Guinea 270,109 16.53%
  Suriname 267,820 45.26%
  Belize 251,862 62.14%
  New Caledonia 192,206 66.29%
  Samoa 191,163 85.96%
  French Polynesia 190,765 62.28%
  Bahamas 174,147 42.48%
  Barbados 163,833 58.17%
  Vanuatu 144,824 44.32%
  Sao Tome and Principe 127,438 56.04%
  Curaçao 108,601 56.81%
  Kiribati 96,184 73.29%
  Tonga 91,949 86.04%
  Aruba 90,185 84.71%
  Seychelles 85,770 80.06%
  Jersey 84,344 76.13%
  Isle of Man 69,560 81.44%
  Antigua and Barbuda 64,290 68.97%
  Cayman Islands 61,826 89.97%
  Saint Lucia 60,140 33.43%
  Andorra 57,901 72.52%
  Guernsey 54,223 85.62%
  Bermuda 48,554 75.65%
  Grenada 44,180 35.21%
  Gibraltar 42,175 129.07%
  Faroe Islands 41,715 85.04%
  Greenland 41,243 72.52%
  Saint Vincent and the Grenadines 37,471 36.04%
  Saint Kitts and Nevis 33,794 70.88%
  Dominica 32,995 45.57%
  Turks and Caicos Islands 32,815 71.76%
  Turkmenistan 32,240 0.53%
  Sint Maarten 29,788 67.41%
  Burundi 28,541 0.22%
  Liechtenstein 26,763 68.00%
  Monaco 26,672 67.49%
  San Marino 26,357 77.50%
  British Virgin Islands 19,466 62.55%
  Caribbean Netherlands 19,109 72.26%
  Cook Islands 15,084 88.56%
  Nauru 11,522 90.79%
  Anguilla 10,853 68.36%
  Wallis and Futuna 7,136 61.54%
  Tuvalu 6,368 53.40%
  Saint Helena, Ascension and Tristan da Cunha 4,361 71.83%
  Falkland Islands 2,632 75.57%
  Tokelau 2,203 116.38%
  Montserrat 2,104 47.68%
  Niue 1,650 102.23%
  Pitcairn Islands 47 100.00%
  North Korea 0 0.00%
  1. ^ The Oxford–AstraZeneca COVID‑19 vaccine is codenamed AZD1222,[168] and later supplied under brand names, including Vaxzevria[169] and Covishield.[170][171]
  2. ^ Number of people who have received at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine (unless noted otherwise).
  3. ^ Percentage of population that has received at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine. May include vaccination of non-citizens, which can push totals beyond 100% of the local population.
  4. ^ Countries which do not report data for a column are not included in that column's world total.
  5. ^ Vaccination Note: Countries which do not report the number of people who have received at least one dose are not included in the world total.
  6. ^ Does not include special administrative regions (Hong Kong and Macau) or Taiwan.
  7. ^ Data on member states of the European Union are individually listed, but are also summed here for convenience. They are not double-counted in world totals.
  8. ^ Vaccination Note: Includes Freely Associated States
  9. ^ Vaccination Note: Includes Vatican City

As of 11 January 2023, 12.7 billion COVID-19 vaccine doses have been administered worldwide, with 67.9 percent of the global population having received at least one dose. While 4.19 million vaccines were then being administered daily, only 22.3 percent of people in low-income countries had received at least a first vaccine by September 2022, according to official reports from national health agencies, which are collated by Our World in Data.[264]

During a pandemic on the rapid timeline and scale of COVID-19 cases in 2020, international organizations like the World Health Organization (WHO) and Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations (CEPI), vaccine developers, governments, and industry evaluated the distribution of the eventual vaccine(s).[265] Individual countries producing a vaccine may be persuaded to favor the highest bidder for manufacturing or provide first-service to their own country.[266][267][268][269][excessive citations] Experts emphasize that licensed vaccines should be available and affordable for people at the frontline of healthcare and having the most need.[266][267][269]

In April 2020, it was reported that the UK agreed to work with 20 other countries and global organizations including France, Germany, and Italy to find a vaccine and to share the results and that UK citizens would not get preferential access to any new COVID‑19 vaccines developed by taxpayer-funded UK universities.[270] Several companies planned to initially manufacture a vaccine at artificially low pricing, then increase prices for profitability later if annual vaccinations are needed and as countries build stock for future needs.[269]

An April 2020 CEPI report stated: "Strong international coordination and cooperation between vaccine developers, regulators, policymakers, funders, public health bodies, and governments will be needed to ensure that promising late-stage vaccine candidates can be manufactured in sufficient quantities and equitably supplied to all affected areas, particularly low-resource regions."[271] The WHO and CEPI are developing financial resources and guidelines for the global deployment of several safe, effective COVID‑19 vaccines, recognizing the need are different across countries and population segments.[265][272][273][274][excessive citations] For example, successful COVID‑19 vaccines would be allocated early to healthcare personnel and populations at greatest risk of severe illness and death from COVID‑19 infection, such as the elderly or densely-populated impoverished people.[275][276]

The WHO had set out the target to vaccinate 40% of the population of all countries by the end of 2021 and 70% by mid-2022,[277] but many countries missed the 40% target at the end of 2021.[278][279]

Access

Countries have extremely unequal access to the COVID-19 vaccine. Vaccine equity has not been achieved, or even approximated. The inequity has harmed both countries with poor access and countries with good access.[18][19][280]

Nations pledged to buy doses of the COVID‑19 vaccine before the doses were available. Though high-income nations represent only 14% of the global population, as of 15 November 2020, they had contracted to buy 51% of all pre-sold doses. Some high-income nations bought more doses than would be necessary to vaccinate their entire populations.[17]

 
Production of Sputnik V vaccine in Brazil, January 2021
 
An elderly man receiving second dose of CoronaVac vaccine in Brazil, April 2021
 
Covid vaccination for children aged 12–14 in Bhopal, India

In January 2021, WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus warned of problems with equitable distribution: "More than 39 million doses of vaccine have now been administered in at least 49 higher-income countries. Just 25 doses have been given in one lowest-income country. Not 25 million; not 25 thousand; just 25."[281]

In March 2021, it was revealed the US attempted to convince Brazil not to purchase the Sputnik V COVID‑19 vaccine, fearing "Russian influence" in Latin America.[282] Some nations involved in long-standing territorial disputes have reportedly had their access to vaccines blocked by competing nations; Palestine has accused Israel of blocking vaccine delivery to Gaza, while Taiwan has suggested that China has hampered its efforts to procure vaccine doses.[283][284][285]

A single dose of the COVID‑19 vaccine by AstraZeneca would cost 47 Egyptian pounds (EGP), and the authorities are selling it between 100 and 200 EGP. A report by Carnegie Endowment for International Peace cited the poverty rate in Egypt as around 29.7 percent, which constitutes approximately 30.5 million people, and claimed that about 15 million of the Egyptians would be unable to gain access to the luxury of vaccination. A human rights lawyer, Khaled Ali, launched a lawsuit against the government, forcing them to provide vaccination free of cost to all members of the public.[286]

According to immunologist Dr. Anthony Fauci, mutant strains of the virus and limited vaccine distribution pose continuing risks and he said: "we have to get the entire world vaccinated, not just our own country."[287] Edward Bergmark and Arick Wierson are calling for a global vaccination effort and wrote that the wealthier nations' "me-first" mentality could ultimately backfire because the spread of the virus in poorer countries would lead to more variants, against which the vaccines could be less effective.[288]

In March 2021, the United States, Britain, European Union member states and some other members of the World Trade Organization (WTO) blocked a push by more than eighty developing countries to waive COVID‑19 vaccine patent rights in an effort to boost production of vaccines for poor nations.[289] On 5 May 2021, the US government under President Joe Biden announced that it supports waiving intellectual property protections for COVID‑19 vaccines.[290] The Members of the European Parliament have backed a motion demanding the temporary lifting of intellectual properties rights for COVID‑19 vaccines.[291]

 
COVID‑19 mass vaccination queue in Finland, June 2021
 
A drive-through COVID‑19 vaccination center in Iran, August 2021

In a meeting in April 2021, the World Health Organization's emergency committee addressed concerns of persistent inequity in the global vaccine distribution.[292] Although 9 percent of the world's population lives in the 29 poorest countries, these countries had received only 0.3% of all vaccines administered as of May 2021.[293] In March 2021, Brazilian journalism agency Agência Pública reported that the country vaccinated about twice as many people who declare themselves white than black and noted that mortality from COVID‑19 is higher in the black population.[294]

In May 2021, UNICEF made an urgent appeal to industrialized nations to pool their excess COVID‑19 vaccine capacity to make up for a 125-million-dose gap in the COVAX program. The program mostly relied on the Oxford–AstraZeneca COVID‑19 vaccine produced by Serum Institute of India, which faced serious supply problems due to increased domestic vaccine needs in India from March to June 2021. Only a limited amount of vaccines can be distributed efficiently, and the shortfall of vaccines in South America and parts of Asia are due to a lack of expedient donations by richer nations. International aid organizations have pointed at Nepal, Sri Lanka, and Maldives as well as Argentina and Brazil, and some parts of the Caribbean as problem areas, where vaccines are in short supply. In mid-May 2021, UNICEF was also critical of the fact that most proposed donations of Moderna and Pfizer vaccines were not slated for delivery until the second half of 2021, or early in 2022.[295]

In July 2021, the heads of the World Bank Group, the International Monetary Fund, the World Health Organization, and the World Trade Organization said in a joint statement: "As many countries are struggling with new variants and a third wave of COVID‑19 infections, accelerating access to vaccines becomes even more critical to ending the pandemic everywhere and achieving broad-based growth. We are deeply concerned about the limited vaccines, therapeutics, diagnostics, and support for deliveries available to developing countries."[296][297] In July 2021, The BMJ reported that countries have thrown out over 250,000 vaccine doses as supply exceeded demand and strict laws prevented the sharing of vaccines.[298] A survey by The New York Times found that over a million doses of vaccine had been thrown away in ten U.S. states because federal regulations prohibit recalling them, preventing their redistribution abroad.[299] Furthermore, doses donated close to expiration often cannot be administered quickly enough by recipient countries and end up having to be discarded.[300] To help overcome this problem, the Prime Minister of India, Narendra Modi announced that they would make their digital vaccination management platform CoWIN open to the global community. He also announced that India would also release the source code for contact tracing app Aarogya Setu for developers around the world. Around 142 countries including Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Bhutan, Maldives, Guyana, Antigua & Barbuda, St. Kitts & Nevis and Zambia expressed their interest in the application for COVID management.[301][302]

Amnesty International and Oxfam International have criticized the support of vaccine monopolies by the governments of producing countries, noting that this is dramatically increasing the dose price by five times and often much more, creating an economic barrier to access for poor countries.[303][304] Médecins Sans Frontières (Doctors without Borders) has also criticized vaccine monopolies and repeatedly called from their suspension, supporting the TRIPS Waiver. The waiver was first proposed in October 2020, and has support from most countries, but delayed by opposition from EU (especially Germany – major EU countries such as France, Italy and Spain support the exemption),[305] UK, Norway, and Switzerland, among others. MSF called for a Day of Action in September 2021 to put pressure on the WTO Minister's meeting in November, which was expected to discuss the TRIPS IP waiver.[306][307][308]

 
Inside of a vaccination center in Brussels, Belgium, February 2021

In August 2021, to reduce unequal distribution between rich and poor countries, the WHO called for a moratorium on a booster dose at least until the end of September. However, in August, the United States government announced plans to offer booster doses eight months after the initial course to the general population, starting with priority groups. Before the announcement, the WHO harshly criticized this type of decision, citing the lack of evidence for the need for boosters, except for patients with specific conditions. At this time, vaccine coverage of at least one dose was 58% in high-income countries and only 1.3% in low-income countries, and 1.14 million Americans already received an unauthorized booster dose. US officials argued that waning efficacy against mild and moderate disease might indicate reduced protection against severe disease in the coming months. Israel, France, Germany, and the United Kingdom have also started planning boosters for specific groups.[309][310][311] In September 2021, more than 140 former world leaders, and Nobel laureates, including former President of France François Hollande, former Prime Minister of the United Kingdom Gordon Brown, former Prime Minister of New Zealand Helen Clark, and Professor Joseph Stiglitz, called on the candidates to be the next German chancellor to declare themselves in favour of waiving intellectual property rules for COVID‑19 vaccines and transferring vaccine technologies.[312] In November 2021, nursing unions in 28 countries have filed a formal appeal with the United Nations over the refusal of the UK, EU, Norway, Switzerland, and Singapore to temporarily waive patents for Covid vaccines.[313]

During his first international trip, President of Peru Pedro Castillo spoke at the seventy-sixth session of the United Nations General Assembly on 21 September 2021, proposing the creation of an international treaty signed by world leaders and pharmaceutical companies to guarantee universal vaccine access, arguing "The battle against the pandemic has shown us the failure of the international community to cooperate under the principle of solidarity".[314][315]

Optimizing the societal benefit of vaccination may benefit from a strategy that is tailored to the state of the pandemic, the demographics of a country, the age of the recipients, the availability of vaccines, and the individual risk for severe disease.[11] In the UK, the interval between prime and boost dose was extended to vaccinate as many persons as early as possible,[316] many countries are starting to give an additional booster shot to the immunosuppressed[317][318] and the elderly,[319] and research predicts an additional benefit of personalizing vaccine dose in the setting of limited vaccine availability when a wave of virus Variants of Concern hits a country.[320]

Despite the extremely rapid development of effective mRNA and viral vector vaccines, vaccine equity has not been achieved.[18] The World Health Organization called for 70 per cent of the global population to be vaccinated by mid-2022, but as of March 2022 it was estimated that only one per cent of the 10 billion doses given worldwide had been administered in low-income countries.[321] An additional 6 billion vaccinations may be needed to fill vaccine access gaps, particularly in developing countries. Given the projected availability of the newer vaccines, the development and use of whole inactivated virus (WIV) and protein-based vaccines are also recommended. Organizations such as the Developing Countries Vaccine Manufacturers Network could help to support the production of such vaccines in developing countries, with lower production costs and greater ease of deployment.[18][322]

While vaccines substantially reduce the probability and severity of infection, it is still possible for fully vaccinated people to contract and spread COVID‑19.[323] Public health agencies have recommended that vaccinated people continue using preventive measures (wear face masks, social distance, wash hands) to avoid infecting others, especially vulnerable people, particularly in areas with high community spread. Governments have indicated that such recommendations will be reduced as vaccination rates increase and community spread declines.[324]

Economics

Moreover, an unequal distribution of vaccines will deepen inequality and exaggerate the gap between rich and poor and will reverse decades of hard-won progress on human development.
— United Nations, COVID vaccines: Widening inequality and millions vulnerable[325]

Vaccine inequity damages the global economy, disrupting the global supply chain.[280] Most vaccines were being reserved for wealthy countries, as of September 2021,[325] some of which have more vaccine than is needed to fully vaccinate their populations.[17] When people, undervaccinated, needlessly die, experience disability, and live under lockdown restrictions, they cannot supply the same goods and services. This harms the economies of undervaccinated and overvaccinated countries alike. Since rich countries have larger economies, rich countries may lose more money to vaccine inequity than poor ones,[280] though the poor ones will lose a higher percentage of GDP and experience longer-term effects.[326] High-income countries would profit an estimated US$4.80 for every $1 spent on giving vaccines to lower-income countries.[280]

The International Monetary Fund sees the vaccine divide between rich and poor nations as a serious obstacle to a global economic recovery.[327] Vaccine inequity disproportionately affects refuge-providing states, as they tend to be poorer, and refugees and displaced people are economically more vulnerable even within those low-income states, so they have suffered more economically from vaccine inequity.[328][18]

Liability

Several governments agreed to shield pharmaceutical companies like Pfizer and Moderna from negligence claims related to COVID‑19 vaccines (and treatments), as in previous pandemics, when governments also took on liability for such claims.

In the US, these liability shields took effect on 4 February 2020, when the US Secretary of Health and Human Services Alex Azar published a notice of declaration under the Public Readiness and Emergency Preparedness Act (PREP Act) for medical countermeasures against COVID‑19, covering "any vaccine, used to treat, diagnose, cure, prevent, or mitigate COVID‑19, or the transmission of SARS-CoV-2 or a virus mutating therefrom". The declaration precludes "liability claims alleging negligence by a manufacturer in creating a vaccine, or negligence by a health care provider in prescribing the wrong dose, absent willful misconduct." In other words, absent "willful misconduct", these companies can not be sued for money damages for any injuries that occur between 2020 and 2024 from the administration of vaccines and treatments related to COVID‑19.[329] The declaration is effective in the United States through 1 October 2024.[329]

In December 2020, the UK government granted Pfizer legal indemnity for its COVID‑19 vaccine.[330]

In the European Union, the COVID‑19 vaccines were granted a conditional marketing authorization which does not exempt manufacturers from civil and administrative liability claims.[331] The EU conditional marketing authorizations were changed to standard authorizations in September 2022.[332] While the purchasing contracts with vaccine manufacturers remain secret, they do not contain liability exemptions even for side-effects not known at the time of licensure.[333]

The Bureau of Investigative Journalism, a nonprofit news organization, reported in an investigation that unnamed officials in some countries, such as Argentina and Brazil, said that Pfizer demanded guarantees against costs of legal cases due to adverse effects in the form of liability waivers and sovereign assets such as federal bank reserves, embassy buildings or military bases, going beyond the expected from other countries such as the US.[334] During the pandemic parliamentary inquiry in Brazil, Pfizer's representative said that its terms for Brazil are the same as for all other countries with which it has signed deals.[335]

On 13 December 2022, the governor of Florida, Ron DeSantis, said that he will petition the state supreme court to convene a grand jury to investigate possible violations in respect to COVID-19 vaccines,[336] and declared that his government would be able to get "the data whether they [the companies] want to give it or not".[337]

Controversy

In June 2021, a report revealed that the UB-612 vaccine, developed by the US-based COVAXX, was a for-profit venture initiated by the Blackwater founder Erik Prince. In a series of text messages to Paul Behrends, the close associate recruited for the COVAXX project, Prince described the profit-making possibilities in selling the COVID‑19 vaccines. COVAXX provided no data from the clinical trials on safety or efficacy it conducted in Taiwan. The responsibility of creating distribution networks was assigned to an Abu Dhabi-based entity, which was mentioned as "Windward Capital" on the COVAXX letterhead but was actually Windward Holdings. The firm's sole shareholder, which handled "professional, scientific and technical activities", was Erik Prince. In March 2021, COVAXX raised $1.35 billion in a private placement.[338]

Misinformation and hesitancy

 
A protest against COVID-19 vaccination in London, United Kingdom
Anti-vaccination activists and other people in many countries have spread a variety of unfounded conspiracy theories and other misinformation about COVID-19 vaccines based on misunderstood or misrepresented science, religion, exaggerated claims about side effects, a story about COVID-19 being spread by 5G, misrepresentations about how the immune system works and when and how COVID-19 vaccines are made, and other false or distorted information. This misinformation has proliferated and may have made many people averse to vaccination.[339] This has led to governments and private organizations around the world introducing measures to incentivize/coerce vaccination, such as lotteries,[340] mandates[341] and free entry to events,[342] which has in turn led to further misinformation about the legality and effect of these measures themselves.[343]

See also

Explanatory notes

  1. ^ Our World in Data (OWID) vaccination maps. Click on the download tab to download the map. The table tab has a table of the exact data by country. The source tab says the data is from verifiable public official sources 21 December 2021 at the Wayback Machine collated by Our World in Data. The map at the source is interactive and provides more detail. Run your cursor over the color bar legend to see the countries that apply to that point in the legend. There is an OWID vaccination info FAQ 10 March 2021 at the Wayback Machine.
  2. ^ The table data is automatically updated daily by a bot; see Template:COVID-19 data for more information. Scroll down past the table to find the documentation and the main reference. See also: Category:Automatically updated COVID-19 pandemic table templates.

References

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covid, vaccine, covid, vaccine, vaccine, intended, provide, acquired, immunity, against, severe, acute, respiratory, syndrome, coronavirus, sars, virus, that, causes, coronavirus, disease, 2019, covid, vaccine, descriptiontargetsars, 2vaccine, typemrna, viral,. A COVID 19 vaccine is a vaccine intended to provide acquired immunity against severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 SARS CoV 2 the virus that causes coronavirus disease 2019 COVID 19 COVID 19 vaccineVaccine descriptionTargetSARS CoV 2Vaccine typemrna viral inactivated proteinClinical dataRoutes ofadministrationIntramuscularATC codeJ07BN01 WHO J07BN02 WHO J07BN03 WHO J07BN04 WHO IdentifiersChemSpidernone source source source source source source source source source source source source source source track How COVID 19 vaccines work The video shows the process of vaccination from injection with RNA or viral vector vaccines to uptake and translation and on to immune system stimulation and effect Prior to the COVID 19 pandemic an established body of knowledge existed about the structure and function of coronaviruses causing diseases like severe acute respiratory syndrome SARS and Middle East respiratory syndrome MERS This knowledge accelerated the development of various vaccine platforms during early 2020 1 The initial focus of SARS CoV 2 vaccines was on preventing symptomatic often severe illness 2 In January 2020 the SARS CoV 2 genetic sequence data was shared through GISAID and by March 2020 the global pharmaceutical industry announced a major commitment to address COVID 19 3 In 2020 the first COVID 19 vaccines were developed and made available to the public through emergency authorizations 4 and conditional approvals 5 6 Initially most COVID 19 vaccines were two dose vaccines with the sole exception being the single dose Janssen COVID 19 vaccine 4 However immunity from the vaccines has been found to wane over time requiring people to get booster doses of the vaccine to maintain protection against COVID 19 4 The COVID 19 vaccines are widely credited for their role in reducing the spread of COVID 19 and reducing the severity and death caused by COVID 19 4 7 According to a June 2022 study COVID 19 vaccines prevented an additional 14 4 to 19 8 million deaths in 185 countries and territories from 8 December 2020 to 8 December 2021 8 9 Many countries implemented phased distribution plans that prioritized those at highest risk of complications such as the elderly and those at high risk of exposure and transmission such as healthcare workers 10 11 Common side effects of COVID 19 vaccines include soreness redness rash inflammation at the injection site fatigue headache myalgia muscle pain and arthralgia joint pain which resolve without medical treatment within a few days 12 13 COVID 19 vaccination is safe for people who are breastfeeding 14 As of 27 December 2022 update 13 16 billion doses of COVID 19 vaccines have been administered worldwide based on official reports from national public health agencies 15 By December 2020 more than 10 billion vaccine doses had been preordered by countries 16 with about half of the doses purchased by high income countries comprising 14 of the world s population 17 Despite the extremely rapid development of effective mRNA and viral vector vaccines worldwide vaccine equity has not been achieved The development and use of whole inactivated virus WIV and protein based vaccines have also been recommended especially for use in developing countries 18 19 The United States Food and Drug Administration FDA has now authorized bivalent vaccines to protect against the original COVID 19 strain and its Omicron variant 20 Contents 1 Background 2 Vaccine technologies 2 1 mRNA vaccines 2 2 Adenovirus vector vaccines 2 3 Inactivated virus vaccines 2 4 Subunit vaccines 2 5 Other types 3 List of authorized vaccines 4 Delivery methods 4 1 Intranasal 4 2 Autologous 5 Universal vaccine 6 Formulation 7 Planning and development 7 1 Challenges 7 2 Organizations 8 Clinical research 8 1 Post vaccination complications 9 History 10 Effectiveness 10 1 Duration of immunity 10 1 1 Immune evasion by variants 10 1 1 1 Vaccine adjustments 10 2 Effectiveness against transmission 10 3 Mix and match 11 Adverse events 12 Society and culture 12 1 Distribution 12 2 Access 12 2 1 Economics 12 3 Liability 12 4 Controversy 12 5 Misinformation and hesitancy 13 See also 14 Explanatory notes 15 References 16 Further reading 16 1 Vaccine protocols 17 External linksBackground COVID 19 vaccine doses administered by continent as of October 11 2021 For vaccines that require multiple doses each individual dose is counted As the same person may receive more than one dose the number of doses can be higher than the number of people in the population Map showing share of population fully vaccinated against COVID 19 relative to a country s total population note 1 A US airman receiving a COVID 19 vaccine December 2020 Map of countries by approval status Approved for general use mass vaccination underway EUA or equivalent granted mass vaccination underway EUA granted mass vaccination planned No data available Prior to COVID 19 a vaccine for an infectious disease had never been produced in less than several years and no vaccine existed for preventing a coronavirus infection in humans 21 However vaccines have been produced against several animal diseases caused by coronaviruses including as of 2003 infectious bronchitis virus in birds canine coronavirus and feline coronavirus 22 Previous projects to develop vaccines for viruses in the family Coronaviridae that affect humans have been aimed at severe acute respiratory syndrome SARS and Middle East respiratory syndrome MERS Vaccines against SARS 23 and MERS 24 have been tested in non human animals According to studies published in 2005 and 2006 the identification and development of novel vaccines and medicines to treat SARS was a priority for governments and public health agencies around the world at that time 25 26 27 There is no cure or protective vaccine proven to be safe and effective against SARS in humans 28 29 There is also no proven vaccine against MERS 30 When MERS became prevalent it was believed that existing SARS research might provide a useful template for developing vaccines and therapeutics against a MERS CoV infection 28 31 As of March 2020 there was one DNA based MERS vaccine which completed Phase I clinical trials in humans 32 and three others in progress all being viral vectored vaccines two adenoviral vectored ChAdOx1 MERS BVRS GamVac and one MVA vectored MVA MERS S 33 Vaccines that use an inactive or weakened virus that has been grown in eggs typically take more than a decade to develop 34 35 In contrast mRNA is a molecule that can be made quickly and research on mRNA to fight diseases was begun decades before the COVID 19 pandemic by scientists such as Drew Weissman and Katalin Kariko who tested on mice Moderna began human testing of an mRNA vaccine in 2015 34 Viral vector vaccines were also developed for the COVID 19 pandemic after the technology was previously cleared for Ebola 34 As multiple COVID 19 vaccines have been authorized or licensed for use real world vaccine effectiveness RWE is being assessed using case control and observational studies 36 37 A study is investigating the long lasting protection against SARS CoV 2 provided by the mRNA vaccines 38 39 Vaccine technologies Conceptual diagram showing three vaccine types for forming SARS CoV 2 proteins to prompt an immune response 1 RNA vaccine 2 subunit vaccine 3 viral vector vaccine Vaccine platforms being employed for SARS CoV 2 Whole virus vaccines include both attenuated and inactivated forms of the virus Protein and peptide subunit vaccines are usually combined with an adjuvant in order to enhance immunogenicity The main emphasis in SARS CoV 2 vaccine development has been on using the whole spike protein in its trimeric form or components of it such as the RBD region Multiple non replicating viral vector vaccines have been developed particularly focused on adenovirus while there has been less emphasis on the replicating viral vector constructs 40 As of July 2021 at least nine different technology platforms are under research and development to create an effective vaccine against COVID 19 41 42 Most of the platforms of vaccine candidates in clinical trials are focused on the coronavirus spike protein S protein and its variants as the primary antigen of COVID 19 infection 41 since the S protein triggers strong B cell and T cell immune responses 43 44 However other coronavirus proteins are also being investigated for vaccine development like the nucleocapsid because they also induce a robust T cell response and their genes are more conserved and recombine less frequently compared to Spike 44 45 46 Future generations of COVID 19 vaccines that may target more and conserved genomic regions will also act as an insurance against the manifestation of catastrophic scenarios concerning the future evolutionary path of SARS CoV 2 or any similar Coronavirus epidemic pandemic 47 Platforms developed in 2020 involved nucleic acid technologies nucleoside modified messenger RNA and DNA non replicating viral vectors peptides recombinant proteins live attenuated viruses and inactivated viruses 21 41 48 49 Many vaccine technologies being developed for COVID 19 are not like vaccines already in use to prevent influenza but rather are using next generation strategies for precise targeting of COVID 19 infection mechanisms 41 48 49 Several of the synthetic vaccines use a 2P mutation to lock the spike protein into its prefusion configuration stimulating an adaptive immune response to the virus before it attaches to a human cell 50 Vaccine platforms in development may improve flexibility for antigen manipulation and effectiveness for targeting mechanisms of COVID 19 infection in susceptible population subgroups such as healthcare workers the elderly children pregnant women and people with weakened immune systems 41 48 mRNA vaccines Further information mRNA vaccine Diagram of the operation of an RNA vaccine Messenger RNA contained in the vaccine enters cells and is translated into foreign proteins which trigger an immune response Several COVID 19 vaccines including the Pfizer BioNTech and Moderna vaccines have been developed to use RNA to stimulate an immune response When introduced into human tissue the vaccine contains either self replicating RNA or messenger RNA mRNA which both cause cells to express the SARS CoV 2 spike protein This teaches the body how to identify and destroy the corresponding pathogen RNA vaccines often but not always use nucleoside modified messenger RNA The delivery of mRNA is achieved by a coformulation of the molecule into lipid nanoparticles which protect the RNA strands and help their absorption into the cells 51 52 53 54 RNA vaccines are the first COVID 19 vaccines to be authorized in the United Kingdom the United States and the European Union 55 56 Authorized vaccines of this type are the Pfizer BioNTech wbr 57 58 59 and Moderna vaccines 60 61 The CVnCoV RNA vaccine from CureVac failed in clinical trials 62 Severe allergic reactions are rare In December 2020 1 893 360 first doses of Pfizer BioNTech COVID 19 vaccine administration resulted in 175 cases of severe allergic reaction of which 21 were anaphylaxis 63 For 4 041 396 Moderna COVID 19 vaccine dose administrations in December 2020 and January 2021 only ten cases of anaphylaxis were reported 63 Lipid nanoparticles LNPs were most likely responsible for the allergic reactions 63 Adenovirus vector vaccines These vaccines are examples of non replicating viral vector vaccines using an adenovirus shell containing DNA that encodes a SARS CoV 2 protein 64 65 The viral vector based vaccines against COVID 19 are non replicating meaning that they do not make new virus particles but rather produce only the antigen which elicits a systemic immune response 64 Authorized vaccines of this type are the Oxford AstraZeneca COVID 19 vaccine wbr 66 67 68 the Sputnik V COVID 19 vaccine 69 Convidecia and the Janssen COVID 19 vaccine 70 71 Convidecia and the Janssen COVID 19 vaccine are both one shot vaccines which offer less complicated logistics and can be stored under ordinary refrigeration for several months 72 73 Sputnik V uses Ad26 for its first dose which is the same as Janssen s only dose and Ad5 for the second dose which is the same as Convidecia s only dose 74 In August 2021 the developers of Sputnik V proposed in view of the Delta case surge that Pfizer test the Ad26 component termed its Light version 75 as a booster shot Delta cases surge in US amp Israel shows mRNA vaccines need a heterogeneous booster to strengthen amp prolong immune response SputnikV pioneered mix amp match approach combo trials amp showed 83 1 efficacy vs Delta Today RDIF offers Pfizer to start trial with Sputnik Light as booster 76 Inactivated virus vaccines Inactivated vaccines consist of virus particles that are grown in culture and then killed using a method such as heat or formaldehyde to lose disease producing capacity while still stimulating an immune response 77 Authorized vaccines of this type are the Chinese CoronaVac 78 79 80 and the Sinopharm BIBP wbr 81 and WIBP vaccines the Indian Covaxin later this year the Russian CoviVac 82 the Kazakh vaccine QazVac 83 and the Iranian COVIran Barekat 84 Vaccines in clinical trials include the Valneva COVID 19 vaccine 85 unreliable source 86 Subunit vaccines Subunit vaccines present one or more antigens without introducing whole pathogen particles The antigens involved are often protein subunits but can be any molecule that is a fragment of the pathogen 87 The authorized vaccines of this type are Novavax COVID 19 vaccine 88 the peptide vaccine EpiVacCorona wbr 89 ZF2001 42 MVC COV1901 90 Corbevax 91 92 the Sanofi GSK vaccine 93 94 and Soberana 02 a conjugate vaccine 95 The V451 vaccine was in clinical trials that were terminated after it was found that the vaccine may potentially cause incorrect results for subsequent HIV testing wbr 96 97 Other types Additional types of vaccines that are in clinical trials include virus like particle vaccines multiple DNA plasmid vaccines 98 wbr 99 100 101 102 103 at least two lentivirus vector vaccines wbr 104 wbr 105 a conjugate vaccine and a vesicular stomatitis virus displaying the SARS CoV 2 spike protein 106 Scientists investigated whether existing vaccines for unrelated conditions could prime the immune system and lessen the severity of COVID 19 infection 107 There is experimental evidence that the BCG vaccine for tuberculosis has non specific effects on the immune system but no evidence that this vaccine is effective against COVID 19 108 List of authorized vaccinesMain article List of COVID 19 vaccine authorizations COVID 19 vaccines authorized for emergency use or approved for full use Common name Type technology Country of origin First authorization NotesAuthorized in more than 10 countriesOxford AstraZeneca Adenovirus vector United Kingdom Sweden December 2020Pfizer BioNTech RNA Germany United States December 2020 Both original and Omicron variant versionsJanssen Adenovirus vector United States Netherlands February 2021Moderna RNA United States December 2020 Both original and Omicron variant versionsSinopharm BIBP Inactivated China July 2020Sputnik V Adenovirus vector Russia August 2020CoronaVac Inactivated China August 2020Novavax Subunit virus like particle United States December 2021 A recombinant nanoparticle vaccine 109 Covaxin Inactivated India January 2021Valneva Inactivated France Austria April 2022Sanofi GSK Subunit France United Kingdom November 2022 Based on Beta variantSputnik Light Adenovirus vector Russia May 2021Authorized in 2 10 countriesConvidecia Adenovirus vector China June 2020Sinopharm WIBP Inactivated China February 2021Abdala Subunit Cuba July 2021EpiVacCorona wbr Subunit Russia October 2020Zifivax Subunit China March 2021Soberana 02 Subunit Cuba Iran June 2021CoviVac Inactivated Russia February 2021Medigen Subunit Taiwan July 2021QazCovid in Inactivated Kazakhstan April 2021Minhai Inactivated China May 2021COVIran Barekat Inactivated Iran June 2021Soberana Plus Subunit Cuba August 2021Corbevax wbr Subunit India United States December 2021Authorized in 1 countryChinese Academy of Medical Sciences Inactivated China June 2021ZyCoV D wbr DNA India August 2021FAKHRAVAC Inactivated Iran September 2021COVAX 19 Subunit Australia Iran October 2021Razi Cov Pars Subunit Iran October 2021Turkovac Inactivated Turkey December 2021Sinopharm CNBG Subunit China December 2021 Based on original Beta and Kappa variantsCoVLP Virus like particle Canada United Kingdom February 2022Noora Subunit Iran March 2022Skycovione Subunit South Korea June 2022Walvax RNA China September 2022iNCOVACC Adenovirus vector India September 2022 Nasal vaccineV 01 Subunit China September 2022Gemcovac RNA India October 2022 Self amplifying RNA vaccineIndoVac Subunit Indonesia October 2022Delivery methodsCurrently all coronavirus vaccines available regardless of the different types of technology they are based on are administrated by injection However various other types of vaccine delivery methods have been studied for future coronavirus vaccines 110 Intranasal Intranasal vaccines target mucosal immunity in the nasal mucosa which is a portal for viral entrance to the body 111 112 These vaccines are designed to stimulate nasal immune factors such as IgA 111 In addition to inhibiting the virus nasal vaccines provide ease of administration because no needles and the accompanying needle phobia are involved 112 113 Nasal vaccines have been approved for influenza 112 113 but not for COVID 19 A variety of intranasal COVID 19 vaccines are undergoing clinical trials One is in use in China 114 Examples include a vaccine candidate which uses a modified avian virus as a vector to target SARS CoV 2 spike proteins and an mRNA vaccine delivered via a nasal nanoparticle spray 115 In September 2022 India and China approved the two first nasal COVID 19 vaccines iNCOVACC and Convidecia which may as boosters 116 also reduce transmission 117 118 potentially via sterilizing immunity 117 Autologous Aivita Biomedical is developing an experimental autologous dendritic cell COVID 19 vaccine kit where the vaccine is prepared and incubated at the point of care using cells from the intended recipient 119 The vaccine is undergoing small phase I and phase II clinical studies 119 120 121 Universal vaccineMain article Universal coronavirus vaccine A universal coronavirus vaccine is effective against all coronavirus and possibly other viruses 122 123 The concept was publicly endorsed by NIAID director Anthony Fauci virologist Jeffery K Taubenberger and David M Morens 124 In March 2022 the White House released the National COVID 19 Preparedness Plan which recommended to accelerate development of such vaccines 125 One strategy for developing such vaccines was developed at Walter Reed Army Institute of Research WRAIR It uses a spike ferritin based nanoparticle SpFN This vaccine began a Phase I clinical trial in April 2022 126 Another strategy is to attach vaccine fragments from multiple strains to a nanoparticle scaffold Universality is enhanced by targeting the receptor binding domain rather than the spike protein 127 FormulationAs of September 2020 update eleven of the vaccine candidates in clinical development use adjuvants to enhance immunogenicity 41 An immunological adjuvant is a substance formulated with a vaccine to elevate the immune response to an antigen such as the COVID 19 virus or influenza virus 128 Specifically an adjuvant may be used in formulating a COVID 19 vaccine candidate to boost its immunogenicity and efficacy to reduce or prevent COVID 19 infection in vaccinated individuals 128 129 Adjuvants used in COVID 19 vaccine formulation may be particularly effective for technologies using the inactivated COVID 19 virus and recombinant protein based or vector based vaccines 129 Aluminum salts known as alum were the first adjuvant used for licensed vaccines and are the adjuvant of choice in some 80 of adjuvanted vaccines 129 The alum adjuvant initiates diverse molecular and cellular mechanisms to enhance immunogenicity including release of proinflammatory cytokines 128 129 Planning and developmentMain article History of COVID 19 vaccine development Since January 2020 vaccine development has been expedited via unprecedented collaboration in the multinational pharmaceutical industry and between governments 41 Multiple steps along the entire development path are evaluated including 21 130 the level of acceptable toxicity of the vaccine its safety targeting vulnerable populations the need for vaccine efficacy breakthroughs the duration of vaccination protection special delivery systems such as oral or nasal rather than by injection dose regimen stability and storage characteristics emergency use authorization before formal licensing optimal manufacturing for scaling to billions of doses and dissemination of the licensed vaccine Challenges There have been several unique challenges with COVID 19 vaccine development The urgency to create a vaccine for COVID 19 led to compressed schedules that shortened the standard vaccine development timeline in some cases combining clinical trial steps over months a process typically conducted sequentially over several years 131 Public health programs have been described as in a race to vaccinate individuals with the early wave vaccines 132 Timelines for conducting clinical research normally a sequential process requiring years are being compressed into safety efficacy and dosing trials running simultaneously over months potentially compromising safety assurance 131 133 As an example Chinese vaccine developers and the government Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention began their efforts in January 2020 134 and by March were pursuing numerous candidates on short timelines with the goal to showcase Chinese technology strengths over those of the United States and to reassure the Chinese people about the quality of vaccines produced in China 131 135 The rapid development and urgency of producing a vaccine for the COVID 19 pandemic was expected to increase the risks and failure rate of delivering a safe effective vaccine 48 49 136 Additionally research at universities is obstructed by physical distancing and closing of laboratories 137 138 Vaccines must progress through several phases of clinical trials to test for safety immunogenicity effectiveness dose levels and adverse effects of the candidate vaccine 139 140 Vaccine developers have to invest resources internationally to find enough participants for Phase II III clinical trials when the virus has proved to be a moving target of changing transmission rates across and within countries forcing companies to compete for trial participants 141 Clinical trial organizers also may encounter people unwilling to be vaccinated due to vaccine hesitancy 142 or disbelief in the science of the vaccine technology and its ability to prevent infection 143 As new vaccines are developed during the COVID 19 pandemic licensure of COVID 19 vaccine candidates requires submission of a full dossier of information on development and manufacturing quality 144 145 146 Organizations Internationally the Access to COVID 19 Tools Accelerator is a G20 and World Health Organization WHO initiative announced in April 2020 147 148 It is a cross discipline support structure to enable partners to share resources and knowledge It comprises four pillars each managed by two to three collaborating partners Vaccines also called COVAX Diagnostics Therapeutics and Health Systems Connector 149 The WHO s April 2020 R amp D Blueprint for the novel Coronavirus documented a large international multi site individually randomized controlled clinical trial to allow the concurrent evaluation of the benefits and risks of each promising candidate vaccine within 3 6 months of it being made available for the trial The WHO vaccine coalition will prioritize which vaccines should go into Phase II and III clinical trials and determine harmonized Phase III protocols for all vaccines achieving the pivotal trial stage 150 National governments have also been involved in vaccine development Canada announced funding of 96 projects for development and production of vaccines at Canadian companies and universities with plans to establish a vaccine bank that could be used if another coronavirus outbreak occurs 151 and to support clinical trials and develop manufacturing and supply chains for vaccines 152 China provided low rate loans to one vaccine developer through its central bank and quickly made land available for the company to build production plants 133 Three Chinese vaccine companies and research institutes are supported by the government for financing research conducting clinical trials and manufacturing 153 The United Kingdom government formed a COVID 19 vaccine task force in April 2020 to stimulate local efforts for accelerated development of a vaccine through collaborations of industry universities and government agencies The UK s Vaccine Taskforce contributed to every phase of development from research to manufacturing 154 In the United States the Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority BARDA a federal agency funding disease fighting technology announced investments to support American COVID 19 vaccine development and manufacture of the most promising candidates 133 155 In May 2020 the government announced funding for a fast track program called Operation Warp Speed 156 157 By March 2021 BARDA had funded an estimated 19 3 billion in COVID 19 vaccine development 158 Large pharmaceutical companies with experience in making vaccines at scale including Johnson amp Johnson AstraZeneca and GlaxoSmithKline GSK formed alliances with biotechnology companies governments and universities to accelerate progression toward effective vaccines 133 131 Clinical researchMain article COVID 19 vaccine clinical research COVID 19 vaccine clinical research uses clinical research to establish the characteristics of COVID 19 vaccines These characteristics include efficacy effectiveness and safety As of November 2022 update 40 vaccines are authorized by at least one national regulatory authority for public use 159 160 As of June 2022 update 353 vaccine candidates are in various stages of development with 135 in clinical research including 38 in phase I trials 32 in phase I II trials 39 in phase III trials and 9 in phase IV development 159 Post vaccination complications Main article Embolic and thrombotic events after COVID 19 vaccination Post vaccination embolic and thrombotic events termed vaccine induced immune thrombotic thrombocytopenia VITT 161 162 163 164 165 vaccine induced prothrombotic immune thrombocytopenia VIPIT 166 thrombosis with thrombocytopenia syndrome TTS 167 164 165 vaccine induced immune thrombocytopenia and thrombosis VITT 165 or vaccine associated thrombotic thrombocytopenia VATT 165 are rare types of blood clotting syndromes that were initially observed in a number of people who had previously received the Oxford AstraZeneca COVID 19 vaccine AZD1222 a during the COVID 19 pandemic 166 172 It was subsequently also described in the Janssen COVID 19 vaccine Johnson amp Johnson leading to suspension of its use until its safety had been reassessed 173 On 5 May 2022 the FDA posted a bulletin limiting the use of the Janssen Vaccine to very specific cases due to further reassesment of the risks of TTS although the FDA also stated in the same bulletin that the benefits of the vaccine outweigh the risks 174 In April 2021 AstraZeneca and the European Medicines Agency EMA updated their information for healthcare professionals about AZD1222 saying it is considered plausible that there is a causal relationship between the vaccination and the occurrence of thrombosis in combination with thrombocytopenia and that although such adverse reactions are very rare they exceeded what would be expected in the general population 172 175 176 177 History COVID 19 vaccine research samples in a NIAID lab freezer 30 January 2020 SARS CoV 2 severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 the virus that causes COVID 19 was isolated in late 2019 178 Its genetic sequence was published on 11 January 2020 triggering the urgent international response to prepare for an outbreak and hasten development of a preventive COVID 19 vaccine 179 180 181 Since 2020 vaccine development has been expedited via unprecedented collaboration in the multinational pharmaceutical industry and between governments 182 By June 2020 tens of billions of dollars were invested by corporations governments international health organizations and university research groups to develop dozens of vaccine candidates and prepare for global vaccination programs to immunize against COVID 19 infection 180 183 184 185 According to the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations CEPI the geographic distribution of COVID 19 vaccine development shows North American entities to have about 40 of the activity compared to 30 in Asia and Australia 26 in Europe and a few projects in South America and Africa 179 182 In February 2020 the World Health Organization WHO said it did not expect a vaccine against SARS CoV 2 to become available in less than 18 months 186 Virologist Paul Offit commented that in hindsight the development of a safe and effective vaccine within 11 months was a remarkable feat 187 The rapidly growing infection rate of COVID 19 worldwide during 2020 stimulated international alliances and government efforts to urgently organize resources to make multiple vaccines on shortened timelines 188 with four vaccine candidates entering human evaluation in March see COVID 19 vaccine Trial and authorization status 179 189 On 24 June 2020 China approved the CanSino vaccine for limited use in the military and two inactivated virus vaccines for emergency use in high risk occupations 190 On 11 August 2020 Russia announced the approval of its Sputnik V vaccine for emergency use though one month later only small amounts of the vaccine had been distributed for use outside of the phase 3 trial 191 The Pfizer BioNTech partnership submitted an Emergency Use Authorization EUA request to the U S Food and Drug Administration FDA for the mRNA vaccine BNT162b2 active ingredient tozinameran on 20 November 2020 192 193 On 2 December 2020 the United Kingdom s Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency MHRA gave temporary regulatory approval for the Pfizer BioNTech vaccine 194 195 becoming the first country to approve the vaccine and the first country in the Western world to approve the use of any COVID 19 vaccine 196 197 198 As of 21 December 2020 many countries and the European Union 199 had authorized or approved the Pfizer BioNTech COVID 19 vaccine Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates granted emergency marketing authorization for the Sinopharm BIBP vaccine 200 201 On 11 December 2020 the FDA granted an EUA for the Pfizer BioNTech COVID 19 vaccine 202 A week later they granted an EUA for mRNA 1273 active ingredient elasomeran the Moderna vaccine 203 204 205 206 On 31 March 2021 the Russian government announced that they had registered the first COVID 19 vaccine for animals 207 Named Carnivac Cov it is an inactivated vaccine for carnivorous animals including pets aimed at preventing mutations that occur during the interspecies transmission of SARS CoV 2 208 In October 2022 China began administering an oral vaccine developed by CanSino Bioligics using its adenovirus model 209 Despite the availability of mRNA and viral vector vaccines worldwide vaccine equity has not been achieved The ongoing development and use of whole inactivated virus WIV and protein based vaccines has been recommended especially for use in developing countries to dampen further waves of the pandemic 210 211 In November 2021 the full nucleotide sequences of the AstraZeneca and Pfizer BioNTech vaccines were released by the UK Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency in response to a freedom of information request 212 213 EffectivenessThe examples and perspective in this United States may not represent a worldwide view of the subject You may improve this United States discuss the issue on the talk page or create a new United States as appropriate March 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message This section is an excerpt from COVID 19 vaccine clinical research Effectiveness edit As of August 2021 studies reported that the COVID 19 vaccines available in the United States are highly protective against severe illness hospitalization and death due to COVID 19 214 In comparison with fully vaccinated people the CDC reported that unvaccinated people were 10 times more likely to be hospitalized and 11 times more likely to die 215 216 CDC reported that vaccine effectiveness fell from 91 against Alpha to 66 against Delta 217 One expert stated that those who are infected following vaccination are still not getting sick and not dying like was happening before vaccination 218 By late August 2021 the Delta variant accounted for 99 percent of U S cases and was found to double the risk of severe illness and hospitalization for those not yet vaccinated 219 A September 2021 study found that having two doses of a which COVID 19 vaccine halved the odds of long COVID 220 In November 2021 a study by the ECDC estimated that 470 000 lives over the age of 60 had been saved since the start of vaccination roll out in the European region 221 On 10 December 2021 the UK Health Security Agency reported that early data indicated a 20 to 40 fold reduction in neutralizing activity for Omicron by sera from Pfizer 2 dose vaccinees relative to earlier strains After a booster dose usually with an mRNA vaccine 222 vaccine effectiveness against symptomatic disease was at 70 75 and the effectiveness against severe disease was expected to be higher 223 According to early December 2021 CDC data unvaccinated adults were about 97 times more likely to die from COVID 19 than fully vaccinated people who had received boosters 224 A meta analysis looking into COVID 19 vaccine differences in immunosuppressed individuals found that people with a weakened immune system are less able to produce neutralizing antibodies For example organ transplant recipients needing three vaccines to achieve seroconversion 225 A study on the serologic response to mRNA vaccines among patients with lymphoma leukemia and myeloma found that one quarter of patients did not produce measurable antibodies varying by cancer type 226 An April 2022 study suggested that natural immunity may offer similar protection from mild and severe cases of COVID 19 as the vaccines 227 228 Duration of immunity As of 2021 available evidence shows that fully vaccinated individuals and those previously infected with SARS CoV 2 have a low risk of subsequent infection for at least six months 229 230 231 There is insufficient data to determine an antibody titer threshold that indicates when an individual is protected from infection 229 Multiple studies show that antibody titers are associated with protection at the population level but individual protection titers remain unknown 229 For some populations such as the elderly and the immunocompromised protection levels may be reduced after both vaccination and infection 229 Available evidence indicates that the level of protection may not be the same for all variants of the virus 229 As of December 2021 there are no FDA authorized or approved tests that providers or the public can use to reliably determine if a person is protected from infection 229 As of March 2022 elderly residents protection against severe illness hospitalization and death in English care homes was high immediately after vaccination but protection declined significantly in the months following vaccination 232 Protection among care home staff who were younger declined much more slowly 232 Regular boosters are recommended for older people and boosters every six months for care home residents appear reasonable 232 The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention CDC recommends a fourth dose of the Pfizer mRNA vaccine as of March 2022 update for certain immunocompromised individuals and people over the age of 50 233 234 Immune evasion by variants In contrast to other investigated prior variants the SARS CoV 2 Omicron variant 235 236 237 238 239 and its BA 4 5 subvariants 240 are evading immunity induced by vaccines which may lead to breakthrough infections despite recent vaccination Nevertheless current vaccines are thought to provide a level of protection against severe illness hospitalizations and deaths due to Omicron 241 Vaccine adjustments See also Universal coronavirus vaccine This section is an excerpt from SARS CoV 2 Omicron variant Vaccine adjustments edit In June 2022 researchers health organizations and regulators were discussing investigating including with preliminary laboratory studies and trials and partly recommending COVID 19 vaccine boosters that mix the original vaccine formulation with Omicron adjusted parts such as spike proteins of a specific Omicron subvariant to better prepare the immune system to recognize a wide variety of variants amid substantial and ongoing immune evasion by Omicron and other SARS CoV 2 variants 242 In June 2022 Pfizer and Moderna developed bivalent vaccines to protect against the SARS COV 2 wild type and the Omicron variant The bivalent vaccines are well tolerated and offer immunity to omicron superior to previous mRNA vaccines 243 The United States Food and Drug Administration FDA has authorized the bivalent vaccines for use in the USA 244 Effectiveness against transmission As of 2022 fully vaccinated individuals with breakthrough infections with SARS CoV 2 delta B 1 617 2 variant have peak viral load similar to unvaccinated cases and are able to transmit infection in household settings 245 Mix and match According to studies the combination of two different COVID 19 vaccines also called cross vaccination or mix and match method provides protection equivalent to that of mRNA vaccines including protection against the Delta variant Individuals who receive the combination of two different vaccines produce strong immune responses with side effects no worse than those caused by standard regimens 246 247 Adverse eventsFor most people the side effects also called adverse effects from COVID 19 vaccines are mild and can be managed at home All vaccines that are administered via intramuscular injection including COVID 19 vaccines have side effects related to the mild trauma associated with the procedure and introduction of a foreign substance into the body 248 These include soreness redness rash and inflammation at the injection site Other common side effects include fatigue headache myalgia muscle pain and arthralgia joint pain all of which generally resolve without medical treatment within a few days 12 13 Also like any other vaccine some people are allergic to one or more ingredients in COVID 19 vaccines Typical side effects are stronger and more common in younger people and in subsequent doses and up to 20 of people report a disruptive level of side effects after the second dose of an mRNA vaccine 249 These side effects are less common or weaker in inactivated vaccines 249 Covid 19 vaccination related enlargement of lymph node happens in 11 6 of those received one dose of vaccine and in 16 of those received two doses 250 COVID 19 vaccination is safe for people who are breastfeeding 14 Temporary changes to the menstrual cycle in young women have been reported although these changes are small compared with natural variation and quickly reverse 251 In one study women who received both doses of a two dose vaccine during the same menstrual cycle an atypical situation may see their next period begin a couple of days late and they have about twice the usual risk of a clinically significant delay about 10 of these women compared to about 4 of unvaccinated women 251 Cycle lengths return to normal after two menstrual cycles post vaccination 251 Women who received doses in separate cycles had approximately the same natural variation in cycle lengths as unvaccinated women 251 Other temporary menstrual effects have been reported such as heavier than normal menstrual bleeding after vaccination 251 Serious adverse events associated COVID 19 vaccines are generally rare but of high interest to the public 252 The official databases of reported adverse events include the World Health Organization s VigiBase the United States Vaccine Adverse Events Reporting System VAERS and the United Kingdom s Yellow Card Scheme Increased public awareness of these reporting systems and the extra reporting requirements under US FDA Emergency Use Authorization rules have resulted in an increased volume of reported adverse events 253 Rare serious effects include anaphylaxis which is severe type of allergic reaction 254 Anaphylaxis affects one person per 250 000 to 400 000 doses administered 249 255 blood clots thrombosis 254 These vaccine induced immune thrombocytopenia and thrombosis are associated with vaccines using an adenovirus system Janssen and Oxford AstraZeneca 254 These affect about one person per 100 000 249 myocarditis and pericarditis or inflammation of the heart 254 There is a rare risk of myocarditis inflammation of the heart muscle or pericarditis inflammation of the membrane covering the heart after the mRNA COVID 19 vaccines Moderna COVID 19 vaccine or the Pfizer BioNTech COVID 19 vaccine The risk of myocarditis after COVID 19 vaccination is estimated to be 0 3 to 5 cases per 100 000 persons with the highest risk in young males 256 In an Israeli nation wide population based study in which the Pfizer BioNTech vaccine was exclusively given the incidence rate of myocarditis was 54 cases per 2 5 million vaccine recipients with an overall incidence rate of 2 cases per 100 000 persons with the highest incidence seen in young males aged 16 to 29 at 10 cases per 100 000 vaccine recipients Of the cases of myocarditis seen 76 were mild in severity with only 1 case of cardiogenic shock heart failure and no deaths reported due to myocarditis 257 COVID 19 vaccines may protect against myocarditis due to subsequent COVID 19 infection as the risk of myocarditis after COVID 19 infection was 50 less in those who were vaccinated compared to unvaccinated persons 258 The risk of myocarditis and pericarditis is significantly higher up to 11 times higher with respect to myocarditis after COVID 19 infection as compared to COVID 19 vaccination with the possible exception of younger men less than 40 years old who may have a higher risk of myocarditis after the second Moderna mRNA vaccine an additional 97 cases of myocarditis per 1 million persons vaccinated 258 thrombotic thrombocytopenia and other autoimmune diseases which have been reported as adverse events after COVID 19 vaccine 259 There are rare reports of subjective hearing changes including tinnitus after vaccination 255 260 261 The rate and type of side effects is also compared to the alternatives For example although vaccination may trigger some side effects the effects experienced from an infection could be worse Neurological side effects from getting COVID 19 are hundreds of times more likely than from vaccination 262 Society and cultureDistribution Main article Deployment of COVID 19 vaccines Note about table in this section Number and percentage of people who have received at least one dose of a COVID 19 vaccine unless noted otherwise May include vaccination of non citizens which can push totals beyond 100 of the local population Table is updated daily by a bot note 2 vte expand collapse Updated January 12 2023 COVID 19 vaccine distribution by country 263 Location Vaccinated b Percent c World d e 5 513 925 343 69 14 China f 1 307 222 000 91 68 India 1 027 237 038 72 48 European Union g 338 076 320 75 10 United States h 268 546 218 80 89 Indonesia 204 045 153 74 06 Brazil 188 820 856 87 70 Pakistan 154 665 740 65 59 Bangladesh 150 472 107 87 90 Japan 104 574 796 84 37 Mexico 99 071 001 77 70 Vietnam 90 399 369 92 07 Russia 87 797 451 60 67 Philippines 78 359 629 67 81 Iran 65 113 292 73 53 Germany 64 851 306 77 79 Nigeria 63 982 167 29 28 Turkey 57 941 051 67 89 Thailand 57 005 497 79 62 France 54 636 743 80 57 United Kingdom 53 806 963 79 97 Egypt 53 749 907 48 43 Italy i 50 867 832 86 16 South Korea 44 866 783 86 59 Ethiopia 44 695 420 37 16 Colombia 42 938 872 82 78 Argentina 41 419 541 91 01 Spain 41 310 693 86 99 Myanmar 34 777 314 64 64 Canada 34 659 652 90 13 Peru 30 224 560 88 77 Tanzania 28 848 632 44 05 Malaysia 28 122 957 82 87 Nepal 27 566 723 90 24 Saudi Arabia 26 951 666 74 03 Morocco 25 015 241 66 78 South Africa 23 962 787 40 01 Poland 22 858 184 57 35 Australia 22 235 240 84 94 Venezuela 22 157 232 78 29 Taiwan 21 829 864 91 36 Uzbekistan 21 247 096 61 36 Uganda 18 867 075 39 93 Mozambique 18 581 293 56 36 Chile 18 083 563 92 25 Sri Lanka 17 143 761 78 53 Ukraine 15 729 617 36 19 Ecuador 15 318 049 85 10 Cambodia 15 241 969 90 90 Angola 14 990 131 42 12 Kenya 14 213 956 26 31 Ivory Coast 13 148 381 46 69 Netherlands 12 775 557 73 00 Ghana 12 034 108 35 95 Afghanistan 11 533 150 28 04 Iraq 11 332 925 25 47 Kazakhstan 10 849 289 55 93 Zambia 10 802 844 53 97 Cuba 10 720 570 95 62 Rwanda 10 572 981 76 75 Sudan 10 504 568 22 41 United Arab Emirates 9 991 089 100 00 Portugal 9 770 966 95 13 Belgium 9 264 433 79 48 Guatemala 8 859 479 49 65 Romania 8 183 574 41 63 Greece 7 932 686 76 39 Algeria 7 840 131 17 75 Sweden 7 814 933 74 08 Somalia 7 729 842 43 93 Bolivia 7 361 008 60 94 Dominican Republic 7 301 350 65 02 Tunisia 7 217 256 58 41 Czech Republic 6 976 284 66 48 Hong Kong 6 910 465 92 28 Austria 6 895 915 77 14 Israel 6 721 619 71 14 Belarus 6 512 843 68 30 Honduras 6 448 366 61 81 Zimbabwe 6 437 808 40 25 Hungary 6 420 813 64 42 Nicaragua 6 176 970 88 90 Switzerland 6 095 428 69 74 Guinea 6 087 292 43 92 Niger 5 935 299 22 65 Laos 5 888 649 79 31 Democratic Republic of the Congo 5 719 214 5 78 Azerbaijan 5 373 253 52 10 Tajikistan 5 282 863 54 18 Singapore 5 160 943 91 55 Jordan 4 821 579 43 25 Denmark 4 794 572 81 51 El Salvador 4 652 597 73 69 Costa Rica 4 594 450 88 68 Malawi 4 587 043 22 48 Finland 4 524 275 81 65 Burkina Faso 4 366 726 19 26 Norway 4 346 995 79 99 Sierra Leone 4 318 136 50 18 New Zealand 4 300 097 82 93 Republic of Ireland 4 105 365 81 73 Paraguay 3 978 606 58 68 Liberia 3 825 381 72 14 Chad 3 749 370 21 16 Benin 3 697 190 27 69 Cameroon 3 651 727 13 08 Panama 3 520 586 79 86 Kuwait 3 455 425 80 94 Serbia 3 354 075 48 81 Oman 3 257 365 71 18 Mali 3 210 921 14 21 Syria 3 179 030 14 37 Uruguay 3 004 604 87 78 Qatar 2 850 786 105 78 Slovakia 2 822 919 51 82 Lebanon 2 740 227 49 92 Croatia 2 320 754 57 58 Libya 2 308 724 34 28 Mongolia 2 272 965 68 27 South Sudan 2 252 089 20 64 Togo 2 242 455 25 34 Bulgaria 2 104 168 31 03 Mauritania 2 096 578 44 27 Madagascar 2 056 662 6 95 Palestine 2 012 767 38 34 Central African Republic 1 984 791 35 58 Lithuania 1 956 499 71 14 Senegal 1 949 419 11 26 Botswana 1 687 070 64 14 Georgia 1 654 504 44 03 Kyrgyzstan 1 639 501 24 73 Latvia 1 346 184 71 84 Albania 1 340 678 47 17 Slovenia 1 265 802 59 72 Bahrain 1 241 174 84 31 Armenia 1 128 072 38 01 Mauritius 1 123 773 86 48 Moldova 1 103 268 33 71 Yemen 1 006 274 2 99 Lesotho 996 759 43 23 Bosnia and Herzegovina 943 394 28 91 Kosovo 906 706 50 88 Timor Leste 878 845 65 52 Estonia 868 672 65 51 North Macedonia 854 392 40 81 Jamaica 844 553 29 87 Trinidad and Tobago 753 588 49 39 Fiji 711 682 76 54 Bhutan 699 116 89 35 Republic of the Congo 695 760 11 92 Macau 677 696 97 48 Cyprus 670 969 74 88 Guinea Bissau 640 393 31 08 Namibia 599 175 23 34 Gambia 548 701 20 28 Guyana 493 404 61 01 Eswatini 492 300 41 29 Luxembourg 481 908 74 41 Malta 478 590 89 74 Brunei 450 404 100 31 Comoros 438 825 53 41 Haiti 402 110 3 47 Maldives 399 151 76 20 Papua New Guinea 369 998 3 65 Cabo Verde 356 734 60 68 Solomon Islands 343 821 47 47 Djibouti 317 428 28 32 Gabon 311 040 13 02 Iceland 309 770 84 00 Northern Cyprus 301 673 78 80 Montenegro 292 783 46 63 Equatorial Guinea 270 109 16 53 Suriname 267 820 45 26 Belize 251 862 62 14 New Caledonia 192 206 66 29 Samoa 191 163 85 96 French Polynesia 190 765 62 28 Bahamas 174 147 42 48 Barbados 163 833 58 17 Vanuatu 144 824 44 32 Sao Tome and Principe 127 438 56 04 Curacao 108 601 56 81 Kiribati 96 184 73 29 Tonga 91 949 86 04 Aruba 90 185 84 71 Seychelles 85 770 80 06 Jersey 84 344 76 13 Isle of Man 69 560 81 44 Antigua and Barbuda 64 290 68 97 Cayman Islands 61 826 89 97 Saint Lucia 60 140 33 43 Andorra 57 901 72 52 Guernsey 54 223 85 62 Bermuda 48 554 75 65 Grenada 44 180 35 21 Gibraltar 42 175 129 07 Faroe Islands 41 715 85 04 Greenland 41 243 72 52 Saint Vincent and the Grenadines 37 471 36 04 Saint Kitts and Nevis 33 794 70 88 Dominica 32 995 45 57 Turks and Caicos Islands 32 815 71 76 Turkmenistan 32 240 0 53 Sint Maarten 29 788 67 41 Burundi 28 541 0 22 Liechtenstein 26 763 68 00 Monaco 26 672 67 49 San Marino 26 357 77 50 British Virgin Islands 19 466 62 55 Caribbean Netherlands 19 109 72 26 Cook Islands 15 084 88 56 Nauru 11 522 90 79 Anguilla 10 853 68 36 Wallis and Futuna 7 136 61 54 Tuvalu 6 368 53 40 Saint Helena Ascension and Tristan da Cunha 4 361 71 83 Falkland Islands 2 632 75 57 Tokelau 2 203 116 38 Montserrat 2 104 47 68 Niue 1 650 102 23 Pitcairn Islands 47 100 00 North Korea 0 0 00 The Oxford AstraZeneca COVID 19 vaccine is codenamed AZD1222 168 and later supplied under brand names including Vaxzevria 169 and Covishield 170 171 Number of people who have received at least one dose of a COVID 19 vaccine unless noted otherwise Percentage of population that has received at least one dose of a COVID 19 vaccine May include vaccination of non citizens which can push totals beyond 100 of the local population Countries which do not report data for a column are not included in that column s world total Vaccination Note Countries which do not report the number of people who have received at least one dose are not included in the world total Does not include special administrative regions Hong Kong and Macau or Taiwan Data on member states of the European Union are individually listed but are also summed here for convenience They are not double counted in world totals Vaccination Note Includes Freely Associated States Vaccination Note Includes Vatican City As of 11 January 2023 update 12 7 billion COVID 19 vaccine doses have been administered worldwide with 67 9 percent of the global population having received at least one dose While 4 19 million vaccines were then being administered daily only 22 3 percent of people in low income countries had received at least a first vaccine by September 2022 according to official reports from national health agencies which are collated by Our World in Data 264 During a pandemic on the rapid timeline and scale of COVID 19 cases in 2020 international organizations like the World Health Organization WHO and Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations CEPI vaccine developers governments and industry evaluated the distribution of the eventual vaccine s 265 Individual countries producing a vaccine may be persuaded to favor the highest bidder for manufacturing or provide first service to their own country 266 267 268 269 excessive citations Experts emphasize that licensed vaccines should be available and affordable for people at the frontline of healthcare and having the most need 266 267 269 In April 2020 it was reported that the UK agreed to work with 20 other countries and global organizations including France Germany and Italy to find a vaccine and to share the results and that UK citizens would not get preferential access to any new COVID 19 vaccines developed by taxpayer funded UK universities 270 Several companies planned to initially manufacture a vaccine at artificially low pricing then increase prices for profitability later if annual vaccinations are needed and as countries build stock for future needs 269 An April 2020 CEPI report stated Strong international coordination and cooperation between vaccine developers regulators policymakers funders public health bodies and governments will be needed to ensure that promising late stage vaccine candidates can be manufactured in sufficient quantities and equitably supplied to all affected areas particularly low resource regions 271 The WHO and CEPI are developing financial resources and guidelines for the global deployment of several safe effective COVID 19 vaccines recognizing the need are different across countries and population segments 265 272 273 274 excessive citations For example successful COVID 19 vaccines would be allocated early to healthcare personnel and populations at greatest risk of severe illness and death from COVID 19 infection such as the elderly or densely populated impoverished people 275 276 The WHO had set out the target to vaccinate 40 of the population of all countries by the end of 2021 and 70 by mid 2022 277 but many countries missed the 40 target at the end of 2021 278 279 Share of people who have received at least one dose of a COVID 19 vaccine relative to a country s total population Date is on the map Commons source COVID 19 vaccine doses administered per 100 people by country Date is on the map Commons source Access Further information Deployment of COVID 19 vaccines Equitable access Countries have extremely unequal access to the COVID 19 vaccine Vaccine equity has not been achieved or even approximated The inequity has harmed both countries with poor access and countries with good access 18 19 280 Nations pledged to buy doses of the COVID 19 vaccine before the doses were available Though high income nations represent only 14 of the global population as of 15 November 2020 they had contracted to buy 51 of all pre sold doses Some high income nations bought more doses than would be necessary to vaccinate their entire populations 17 Production of Sputnik V vaccine in Brazil January 2021 An elderly man receiving second dose of CoronaVac vaccine in Brazil April 2021 Covid vaccination for children aged 12 14 in Bhopal India In January 2021 WHO Director General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus warned of problems with equitable distribution More than 39 million doses of vaccine have now been administered in at least 49 higher income countries Just 25 doses have been given in one lowest income country Not 25 million not 25 thousand just 25 281 In March 2021 it was revealed the US attempted to convince Brazil not to purchase the Sputnik V COVID 19 vaccine fearing Russian influence in Latin America 282 Some nations involved in long standing territorial disputes have reportedly had their access to vaccines blocked by competing nations Palestine has accused Israel of blocking vaccine delivery to Gaza while Taiwan has suggested that China has hampered its efforts to procure vaccine doses 283 284 285 A single dose of the COVID 19 vaccine by AstraZeneca would cost 47 Egyptian pounds EGP and the authorities are selling it between 100 and 200 EGP A report by Carnegie Endowment for International Peace cited the poverty rate in Egypt as around 29 7 percent which constitutes approximately 30 5 million people and claimed that about 15 million of the Egyptians would be unable to gain access to the luxury of vaccination A human rights lawyer Khaled Ali launched a lawsuit against the government forcing them to provide vaccination free of cost to all members of the public 286 According to immunologist Dr Anthony Fauci mutant strains of the virus and limited vaccine distribution pose continuing risks and he said we have to get the entire world vaccinated not just our own country 287 Edward Bergmark and Arick Wierson are calling for a global vaccination effort and wrote that the wealthier nations me first mentality could ultimately backfire because the spread of the virus in poorer countries would lead to more variants against which the vaccines could be less effective 288 In March 2021 the United States Britain European Union member states and some other members of the World Trade Organization WTO blocked a push by more than eighty developing countries to waive COVID 19 vaccine patent rights in an effort to boost production of vaccines for poor nations 289 On 5 May 2021 the US government under President Joe Biden announced that it supports waiving intellectual property protections for COVID 19 vaccines 290 The Members of the European Parliament have backed a motion demanding the temporary lifting of intellectual properties rights for COVID 19 vaccines 291 COVID 19 mass vaccination queue in Finland June 2021 A drive through COVID 19 vaccination center in Iran August 2021 In a meeting in April 2021 the World Health Organization s emergency committee addressed concerns of persistent inequity in the global vaccine distribution 292 Although 9 percent of the world s population lives in the 29 poorest countries these countries had received only 0 3 of all vaccines administered as of May 2021 293 In March 2021 Brazilian journalism agency Agencia Publica reported that the country vaccinated about twice as many people who declare themselves white than black and noted that mortality from COVID 19 is higher in the black population 294 In May 2021 UNICEF made an urgent appeal to industrialized nations to pool their excess COVID 19 vaccine capacity to make up for a 125 million dose gap in the COVAX program The program mostly relied on the Oxford AstraZeneca COVID 19 vaccine produced by Serum Institute of India which faced serious supply problems due to increased domestic vaccine needs in India from March to June 2021 Only a limited amount of vaccines can be distributed efficiently and the shortfall of vaccines in South America and parts of Asia are due to a lack of expedient donations by richer nations International aid organizations have pointed at Nepal Sri Lanka and Maldives as well as Argentina and Brazil and some parts of the Caribbean as problem areas where vaccines are in short supply In mid May 2021 UNICEF was also critical of the fact that most proposed donations of Moderna and Pfizer vaccines were not slated for delivery until the second half of 2021 or early in 2022 295 In July 2021 the heads of the World Bank Group the International Monetary Fund the World Health Organization and the World Trade Organization said in a joint statement As many countries are struggling with new variants and a third wave of COVID 19 infections accelerating access to vaccines becomes even more critical to ending the pandemic everywhere and achieving broad based growth We are deeply concerned about the limited vaccines therapeutics diagnostics and support for deliveries available to developing countries 296 297 In July 2021 The BMJ reported that countries have thrown out over 250 000 vaccine doses as supply exceeded demand and strict laws prevented the sharing of vaccines 298 A survey by The New York Times found that over a million doses of vaccine had been thrown away in ten U S states because federal regulations prohibit recalling them preventing their redistribution abroad 299 Furthermore doses donated close to expiration often cannot be administered quickly enough by recipient countries and end up having to be discarded 300 To help overcome this problem the Prime Minister of India Narendra Modi announced that they would make their digital vaccination management platform CoWIN open to the global community He also announced that India would also release the source code for contact tracing app Aarogya Setu for developers around the world Around 142 countries including Afghanistan Bangladesh Bhutan Maldives Guyana Antigua amp Barbuda St Kitts amp Nevis and Zambia expressed their interest in the application for COVID management 301 302 Amnesty International and Oxfam International have criticized the support of vaccine monopolies by the governments of producing countries noting that this is dramatically increasing the dose price by five times and often much more creating an economic barrier to access for poor countries 303 304 Medecins Sans Frontieres Doctors without Borders has also criticized vaccine monopolies and repeatedly called from their suspension supporting the TRIPS Waiver The waiver was first proposed in October 2020 and has support from most countries but delayed by opposition from EU especially Germany major EU countries such as France Italy and Spain support the exemption 305 UK Norway and Switzerland among others MSF called for a Day of Action in September 2021 to put pressure on the WTO Minister s meeting in November which was expected to discuss the TRIPS IP waiver 306 307 308 Inside of a vaccination center in Brussels Belgium February 2021 In August 2021 to reduce unequal distribution between rich and poor countries the WHO called for a moratorium on a booster dose at least until the end of September However in August the United States government announced plans to offer booster doses eight months after the initial course to the general population starting with priority groups Before the announcement the WHO harshly criticized this type of decision citing the lack of evidence for the need for boosters except for patients with specific conditions At this time vaccine coverage of at least one dose was 58 in high income countries and only 1 3 in low income countries and 1 14 million Americans already received an unauthorized booster dose US officials argued that waning efficacy against mild and moderate disease might indicate reduced protection against severe disease in the coming months Israel France Germany and the United Kingdom have also started planning boosters for specific groups 309 310 311 In September 2021 more than 140 former world leaders and Nobel laureates including former President of France Francois Hollande former Prime Minister of the United Kingdom Gordon Brown former Prime Minister of New Zealand Helen Clark and Professor Joseph Stiglitz called on the candidates to be the next German chancellor to declare themselves in favour of waiving intellectual property rules for COVID 19 vaccines and transferring vaccine technologies 312 In November 2021 nursing unions in 28 countries have filed a formal appeal with the United Nations over the refusal of the UK EU Norway Switzerland and Singapore to temporarily waive patents for Covid vaccines 313 During his first international trip President of Peru Pedro Castillo spoke at the seventy sixth session of the United Nations General Assembly on 21 September 2021 proposing the creation of an international treaty signed by world leaders and pharmaceutical companies to guarantee universal vaccine access arguing The battle against the pandemic has shown us the failure of the international community to cooperate under the principle of solidarity 314 315 Optimizing the societal benefit of vaccination may benefit from a strategy that is tailored to the state of the pandemic the demographics of a country the age of the recipients the availability of vaccines and the individual risk for severe disease 11 In the UK the interval between prime and boost dose was extended to vaccinate as many persons as early as possible 316 many countries are starting to give an additional booster shot to the immunosuppressed 317 318 and the elderly 319 and research predicts an additional benefit of personalizing vaccine dose in the setting of limited vaccine availability when a wave of virus Variants of Concern hits a country 320 Despite the extremely rapid development of effective mRNA and viral vector vaccines vaccine equity has not been achieved 18 The World Health Organization called for 70 per cent of the global population to be vaccinated by mid 2022 but as of March 2022 it was estimated that only one per cent of the 10 billion doses given worldwide had been administered in low income countries 321 An additional 6 billion vaccinations may be needed to fill vaccine access gaps particularly in developing countries Given the projected availability of the newer vaccines the development and use of whole inactivated virus WIV and protein based vaccines are also recommended Organizations such as the Developing Countries Vaccine Manufacturers Network could help to support the production of such vaccines in developing countries with lower production costs and greater ease of deployment 18 322 While vaccines substantially reduce the probability and severity of infection it is still possible for fully vaccinated people to contract and spread COVID 19 323 Public health agencies have recommended that vaccinated people continue using preventive measures wear face masks social distance wash hands to avoid infecting others especially vulnerable people particularly in areas with high community spread Governments have indicated that such recommendations will be reduced as vaccination rates increase and community spread declines 324 Economics Moreover an unequal distribution of vaccines will deepen inequality and exaggerate the gap between rich and poor and will reverse decades of hard won progress on human development United Nations COVID vaccines Widening inequality and millions vulnerable 325 Vaccine inequity damages the global economy disrupting the global supply chain 280 Most vaccines were being reserved for wealthy countries as of September 2021 update 325 some of which have more vaccine than is needed to fully vaccinate their populations 17 When people undervaccinated needlessly die experience disability and live under lockdown restrictions they cannot supply the same goods and services This harms the economies of undervaccinated and overvaccinated countries alike Since rich countries have larger economies rich countries may lose more money to vaccine inequity than poor ones 280 though the poor ones will lose a higher percentage of GDP and experience longer term effects 326 High income countries would profit an estimated US 4 80 for every 1 spent on giving vaccines to lower income countries 280 The International Monetary Fund sees the vaccine divide between rich and poor nations as a serious obstacle to a global economic recovery 327 Vaccine inequity disproportionately affects refuge providing states as they tend to be poorer and refugees and displaced people are economically more vulnerable even within those low income states so they have suffered more economically from vaccine inequity 328 18 Liability Several governments agreed to shield pharmaceutical companies like Pfizer and Moderna from negligence claims related to COVID 19 vaccines and treatments as in previous pandemics when governments also took on liability for such claims In the US these liability shields took effect on 4 February 2020 when the US Secretary of Health and Human Services Alex Azar published a notice of declaration under the Public Readiness and Emergency Preparedness Act PREP Act for medical countermeasures against COVID 19 covering any vaccine used to treat diagnose cure prevent or mitigate COVID 19 or the transmission of SARS CoV 2 or a virus mutating therefrom The declaration precludes liability claims alleging negligence by a manufacturer in creating a vaccine or negligence by a health care provider in prescribing the wrong dose absent willful misconduct In other words absent willful misconduct these companies can not be sued for money damages for any injuries that occur between 2020 and 2024 from the administration of vaccines and treatments related to COVID 19 329 The declaration is effective in the United States through 1 October 2024 329 In December 2020 the UK government granted Pfizer legal indemnity for its COVID 19 vaccine 330 In the European Union the COVID 19 vaccines were granted a conditional marketing authorization which does not exempt manufacturers from civil and administrative liability claims 331 The EU conditional marketing authorizations were changed to standard authorizations in September 2022 332 While the purchasing contracts with vaccine manufacturers remain secret they do not contain liability exemptions even for side effects not known at the time of licensure 333 The Bureau of Investigative Journalism a nonprofit news organization reported in an investigation that unnamed officials in some countries such as Argentina and Brazil said that Pfizer demanded guarantees against costs of legal cases due to adverse effects in the form of liability waivers and sovereign assets such as federal bank reserves embassy buildings or military bases going beyond the expected from other countries such as the US 334 During the pandemic parliamentary inquiry in Brazil Pfizer s representative said that its terms for Brazil are the same as for all other countries with which it has signed deals 335 On 13 December 2022 the governor of Florida Ron DeSantis said that he will petition the state supreme court to convene a grand jury to investigate possible violations in respect to COVID 19 vaccines 336 and declared that his government would be able to get the data whether they the companies want to give it or not 337 Controversy In June 2021 a report revealed that the UB 612 vaccine developed by the US based COVAXX was a for profit venture initiated by the Blackwater founder Erik Prince In a series of text messages to Paul Behrends the close associate recruited for the COVAXX project Prince described the profit making possibilities in selling the COVID 19 vaccines COVAXX provided no data from the clinical trials on safety or efficacy it conducted in Taiwan The responsibility of creating distribution networks was assigned to an Abu Dhabi based entity which was mentioned as Windward Capital on the COVAXX letterhead but was actually Windward Holdings The firm s sole shareholder which handled professional scientific and technical activities was Erik Prince In March 2021 COVAXX raised 1 35 billion in a private placement 338 Misinformation and hesitancy This section is an excerpt from COVID 19 vaccine misinformation and hesitancy edit This article s lead section may not adequately summarize its contents To comply with Wikipedia s lead section guidelines please consider modifying the lead to provide an accessible overview of the article s key points in such a way that it can stand on its own as a concise version of the article September 2021 A protest against COVID 19 vaccination in London United Kingdom Anti vaccination activists and other people in many countries have spread a variety of unfounded conspiracy theories and other misinformation about COVID 19 vaccines based on misunderstood or misrepresented science religion exaggerated claims about side effects a story about COVID 19 being spread by 5G misrepresentations about how the immune system works and when and how COVID 19 vaccines are made and other false or distorted information This misinformation has proliferated and may have made many people averse to vaccination 339 This has led to governments and private organizations around the world introducing measures to incentivize coerce vaccination such as lotteries 340 mandates 341 and free entry to events 342 which has in turn led to further misinformation about the legality and effect of these measures themselves 343 See also2009 swine flu pandemic vaccine COVID 19 drug development COVID 19 drug repurposing research COVID 19 vaccine card List of COVID 19 vaccine authorizations Vaccine passports during the COVID 19 pandemicExplanatory notes Our World in Data OWID vaccination maps Click on the download tab to download the map The table tab has a table of the exact data by country The source tab says the data is from verifiable public official sources Archived 21 December 2021 at the Wayback Machine collated by Our World in Data The map at the source is interactive and provides more detail Run your cursor over the color bar legend to see the countries that apply to that point in the legend There is an OWID vaccination info FAQ Archived 10 March 2021 at the Wayback Machine The table data is automatically updated daily by a bot see Template COVID 19 data for more information Scroll down past the table to find the documentation and the main reference See also Category Automatically updated COVID 19 pandemic table templates References Li YD Chi WY Su JH Ferrall L Hung CF Wu TC December 2020 Coronavirus vaccine development from SARS and MERS to COVID 19 Journal of Biomedical Science 27 1 104 doi 10 1186 s12929 020 00695 2 PMC 7749790 PMID 33341119 Subbarao K July 2021 The success of SARS CoV 2 vaccines and challenges ahead Cell Host amp Microbe 29 7 1111 1123 doi 10 1016 j chom 2021 06 016 PMC 8279572 PMID 34265245 Padilla TB 24 February 2021 No one is safe unless everyone is safe 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