Wait, so how did companies develop the vaccine? What was the process? Cause you would assume that they would somehow measure its effectiveness, and to do that they would have to have the reliable data. Is this meant to explain the whole "we don't know how well it's gonna protect you yet but you should take it anyway" attitude?
"This is not a complicated virus," Bancel told The New York Times.
By February 24, Moderna had shipped its first vaccine batches to NIH scientists in Bethesda, Maryland. Researchers administered the first dose on March 16 in Seattle, Washington. That launched the first clinical trial of any coronavirus vaccine."
Wait, so how did companies develop the vaccine? What was the process? Cause you would assume that they would somehow measure its effectiveness, and to do that they would have to have the reliable data. Is this meant to explain the whole "we don't know how well it's gonna protect you yet but you should take it anyway" attitude?
Moderna whipped out their vax in 2 days https://www.businessinsider.com/moderna-designed-coronavirus-vaccine-in-2-days-2020-11?op=1 "On January 11, researchers from China published the genetic sequence of the coronavirus. Two days later, Moderna's team and NIH scientists had finalized the targeted genetic sequence they would use in the vaccine.
"This is not a complicated virus," Bancel told The New York Times.
By February 24, Moderna had shipped its first vaccine batches to NIH scientists in Bethesda, Maryland. Researchers administered the first dose on March 16 in Seattle, Washington. That launched the first clinical trial of any coronavirus vaccine."