Pfizer places an vaccine against the 'respiratory virus' for the elderly and pregnant women
Executive officials said on Thursday that US pharmaceutical company Pfizer will launch its anti -Omvirus vaccine for the elderly and pregnant women in the United States and Europe later this year. Pfizer and the British Pharmaceutical Company (GSK) developed vaccines against the virus of the Mallavis, and they hoped to launch it in America and Europe this year, but they await the approval of the regulators. “We expect approval in both the United States and Europe to start working in the fall,” said Kina Swanson, head of viral vaccine research and development in Fayzer. The virus of the Mkhli breathing system is a major cause of pneumonia in infants and the elderly, and research contracts have led to two successful vaccines that Fayzer and GSK chase to start it. The lower respiratory disease caused by the virus causes about 14,000 people in the United States annually, and analysts estimate the vaccine market by the end of the current decade by billions of dollars. (GSK) reported on Wednesday that it is also ready to launch the vaccine to the elderly in the United States this year without restrictions on the offer. The US Food and Drug Administration must make the decision to approve the two vaccines by May. Previously, and in December, the United States registered an outbreak of flu, the most violent in more than a decade. Axius cited the centers of disease’s control and prevention that the hospital’s access cases related to the flu doubled during the Week of the Thanksgiving Day (November 24) compared to the previous week, and the highest recorded in the period since the 2010/2011 season. The Centers of Disease Control have estimated that there has been at least 8.7 million flu during this season, 78,000 access cases for hospitals and 4500 deaths. Elderly people of the age of 65 or more, and children who are 4 years or less are particularly affected during the extraordinary wave of flu, especially if they suffer from latent health conditions. Also read: