Management

Bharat Biotech to test swine flu vaccine in 2 months

Hyderabad-based vaccines and biotherapeutics manufacturer Bharat Biotech, which is getting ready with an indigenous H1N1 swine flu candidate vaccine, would go for clinical trials in two months, according to its chairman and managing director Krishna M Ella. - Swine flu: WHO stresses selective use of drugs - Bharat Biotech to set up Rs 100 cr animal vaccine unit - Bharat Bio launches first indigenous single-shot against 5 diseases - Vaccine cuts HIV infection for first time: researchers - "H1N1 virus has not mutated, vaccines on track" - Few takers for govt offer on H1N1 vaccine trials Bharat Biotech apart, two other Indian companies - Serum Institute of India and Panacea - are also making the vaccine. Speaking to Business Standard, Ella said swine flu has not reached a stage where it could not be controlled. He, however, did not give a timeframe in which the trials would be completed. “It all depends on the government,”’ he said, adding that the government has eased the clinical trial norms. He did not elaborate on how many doses of the vaccine would be needed to give protection against the virus. According to him, diseases would continue to come. “First it was avian flu, now it is A H1N1. Tomorrow, it could be H2N2,” he said, adding that the changing environment and deforestation contribute to the increasing disease burden in the country. The company invested about Rs 7 crore for the vaccine and has a capacity to produce 10 million doses. But it would raise the capacity depending on the need, he said. Early this month, the Union health ministry said it would place orders for the vaccines once the companies declare the number of dosages required. Among others, Bharat Biotech supplies more than 300 million doses of polio vaccines in the country and exports the Hepatitis B vaccine to many countries.


Add your comment:
Name:
Site address: http://
Your message:
Enter today\\\\'s date, 2 digits
(spam protection):

News of the day
Markets rebound after a soft start
The markets have firmed up after a soft start this morning. The Sensex opened a point lower at 17,118, and soon touched a low of 17,089 owing to weak cues from the global markets.
Popular Articles
payday loans online

Global PC shipments to grow 2.8% in 2009: Gartner
Driven by mobile PC shipments, global computer market is expected to grow 2.8 per cent in 2009, a research firm said today.

V V: The Terror Axis: Taliban, ISI & opium
Gretchen Peters’ Seeds of Terror: The Taliban, the ISI and New Opium Wars (Thomas Dunne Books, Hachette India reprint, Rs 495) tells you why Afghanistan and Pakistan’s North West Frontier provinces will always be on the boil that will spread into the Punjab and increase in intensity, as recent events have shown. Aided and abetted by rampant corruption spread by poppy growers to the Taliban and other local powers, to drug lords and their allies in government, the influence of opium money pervades Afghan life. Afghanistan today provides 93 per cent of the world’s heroin, far exceeding the combined production of Colombia, north Myanmar, Thailand and other regions of the world. Peters examines the depth of the opium problem and describes how opium sales have ballooned since 2001 and continue to grow exponentially, earning more than half a billion dollars off the opium trade. Why and what could be the consequences for us is the central question asked in the book.