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Andrew Pollard Life story


Andrew Pollard is an emeritus professor at the Institute of Education, University College London. Formerly, he was Professor of Education at the universities of Cambridge, Bristol and the West of England, Bristol.

Strep A: Grandmother says four-year-old Camila Burns getting better

Strep A: Grandmother says four-year-old Camila Burns getting better
Dec 9,2022 6:20 am

... " No antibiotic shortage Prof Sir Andrew Pollard, chairman of the Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation (JCVI), also told Radio 4 on Friday that he is not aware of any " national shortage" in antibiotics to treat strep A...

'I will still ask staff to isolate despite Covid rule change'

'I will still ask staff to isolate despite Covid rule change'
Feb 24,2022 3:30 pm

... Prof Sir Andrew Pollard, who helped develop the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine, has said that " there isn t a right or wrong answer" to when restrictions change...

Covid: Daily tests for key workers and lockdown food bartering in China

Covid: Daily tests for key workers and lockdown food bartering in China
Jan 4,2022 10:16 pm

... Vaccines for all every four to six months not needed, expert saysIt is not affordable or sustainable to keep vaccinating everyone on the planet against Covid-19 regularly, a Prof Sir Andrew Pollard, who helped develop the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine, suggested the most at risk people should be identified and prioritised for jabs instead in the future...

Covid: Vaccines for all every four to six months not needed, says expert

Covid: Vaccines for all every four to six months not needed, says expert
Jan 4,2022 1:35 pm

... Prof Sir Andrew Pollard, who helped develop the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine, says the most at risk should be identified and prioritised instead...

Covid: New Omicron variant not a disaster, says Sage scientist

Covid: New Omicron variant not a disaster, says Sage scientist
Nov 27,2021 1:21 pm

... Like Prof Semple, Prof Sir Andrew Pollard, the director of the Oxford Vaccine Group, expressed cautious optimism that existing vaccines could be effective at preventing serious disease from the Omicron variant...

Should the government do more to protect the NHS?

Should the government do more to protect the NHS?
Oct 21,2021 4:04 pm

... Prof Andrew Pollard, head of Oxford University s vaccine group, who helped develop their Covid vaccine, said the real issue was protecting people who had not had any vaccine doses and those with weakened immune systems, who were ending up in intensive care...

Coronavirus: First patient is injected, the in the UK vaccine trial

Coronavirus: First patient is injected, the in the UK vaccine trial
Apr 23,2020 8:02 pm

... Prof Andrew Pollard, Director of the Oxford Vaccine Group, leading the study, said: We re chasing the end of the current wave of epidemics...

Typhoid vaccine 'works fantastically well'

Typhoid vaccine 'works fantastically well'
Feb 16,2020 8:52 am

... It works fantastically well in preventing this disease affecting some of the world s most vulnerable children, Prof Andrew Pollard, from the University of Oxford, who has been involved in the trials, told BBC News...

Typhoid vaccine 'works fantastically well'

Feb 16,2020 8:52 am

A new typhoid vaccine works "fantastically well" and is being used to help stop an almost untreatable strain of the infection, doctors say.

Cases of the bacterial disease fell by More Than 80% in trials,

Experts said the vaccine was a game-changer and would reduce the "terrible toll wrought by typhoid".

Nine million children are being immunised in Pakistan, where typhoid is now extremely resistant to antibiotics.

What is Typhoid Fever ?

Typhoid Fever is caused by highly contagious Salmonella Typhi bacteria and spread through contaminated food and water.

It is a disease of poverty, most common in countries with poor sanitation and a lack of Clean water.

Symptoms include:

It causes fatal complications, such as Internal Bleeding , in one in 100 people.

Precise numbers on typhoid are hard to collect but it affects between 11 and 21 million people around The World each year and kills 128,000 to 161,000.

What happened in The Trial ?

More Than 20,000 children - aged from Nine Months to 16 years - in Kathmandu Valley , Nepal, took part in The Trial .

Typhoid is a major public-health problem in the area.

Half of The Children were given the vaccine and their cases of typhoid fell by 81% in The First year of the study.

"It works fantastically well in preventing this disease affecting some of The World 's most vulnerable children," Prof Andrew Pollard , from the University of Oxford, who has been involved in the trials, told Bbc News .

"The Burden of typhoid is so huge, we're seeing families taking children into hospital to be treated and being plunged into poverty paying for the costs of investigation and treatment with antibiotics.

"The Arrival of this vaccine to control the disease is a pretty exciting moment. "

The Children in Nepal, as well as those taking part in trials in Malawi and Bangladesh, will now be followed to see how long protection lasts.

Typhoid Vaccine Acceleration Consortium director Dr Kathleen Neuzil said the vaccine could "reduce disease and save lives in populations that lack Clean water and improved sanitation".

Why is a vaccine needed?

The World Health Organization has warned typhoid has acquired a and The World is "reaching the limit" of current treatments.

With rapid urbanisation in the developing world, The Most effective preventative measure - Clean water and flushing toilets - is unachievable for many countries.

And while there are two typhoid vaccines already available, neither is licensed for children under the age of two, so The Most vulnerable people are unprotected.

How bad is The Situation in Pakistan?

Pakistan has an outbreak of what is called extensively drug-resistant (XDR) Typhoid Fever .

"Right now in Pakistan, a strain of typhoid has developed Resistance to all but one of the antibiotics we use to treat the disease, threatening to take us back to The Days when typhoid killed as many as one-fifth of the people that contracted it," Dr Seth Berkley, chief executive of Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance, told Bbc News .

It started in Hyderbad, in Sindh province, in November 2016 and More Than 10,000 people have been infected.

Gavi is now paying for nine million children to be vaccinated and Sindh province will now become The First region in The World to add the vaccine to routine childhood immunisations.

Dr Berkley said: "This vaccine is a game-changer in the battle against typhoid, it also couldn't have arrived at a better time.

"This vaccine should play a key role in bringing this dangerous outbreak under control and, once introduced into more countries' routine immunisation programmes, reducing the terrible toll wrought by typhoid worldwide. "

Prof Pollard added: "It is really exciting to have a new intervention, in a very rapid space of time, that can not only prevent the disease but help in The Fight against anti-microbial Resistance . "

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nepal, antibiotics, vaccination, pakistan

Source of news: bbc.com

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