Moderna's chief medical officer says that vaccine trial results only show that they prevent people from getting sick — not necessarily that recipients won't still be able to transmit the virus
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Moderna Chief Medical Officer Tal Zaks told Axios that the public should not "over-interpret" the vaccine trial results to assume life could go back to normal after adults are vaccinated.
Zaks warned that the trial results show that the vaccine can prevent someone from getting sick or "severely sick," from COVID-19, however, the results don't show that the vaccine prevents transmission of the virus.
"They do not show that they prevent you from potentially carrying this virus transiently and infecting others," Zaks said in an interview for "Axios," the outlet's show on HBO.While he believes based on the science that it's likely that vaccine does prevent transmission, there's still no solid proof of that.
"I think it's important that we don't change behavior solely on the basis of vaccination," he said.Moderna's COVID-19 vaccine is one of three vaccines that have shown effectiveness in trial results. The company said its vaccine is 94.5% effective at protecting people against COVID-19, the disease caused by the novel
On Monday, AstraZeneca and the University of Oxford also reported that their vaccine was effective towards COVID-19.
There have been at least 12.4 million infections in the US so far with over 257,000 deaths, according to data from Johns Hopkins University. Daily cases in the US repeatedly hit record highs in the weeks leading up to Thanksgiving, and many public experts have warned that this could be the deadliest wave of the virus in the US.
The headline of this article was updated to show that Moderna's coronavirus vaccine can prevent people from getting sick.Copyright © 2021. Times Internet Limited. All rights reserved.For reprint rights. Times Syndication Service.
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