ISLAMABAD: Overseas travellers are facing difficulties due to non-availability of COVID-19 vaccines at the government vaccination centres and a private hospital in Islamabad, citing sources, ARY News reported on Tuesday.
The shortage of COVID-19 vaccines hit the vaccination centres in Islamabad. Sources said that the government-run vaccination centres ran out of routine and booster doses of the COVID-19 vaccines in the federal capital.
It was learnt that the vaccines were not being supplied to the centre for a month. Additionally, the vaccines were not available at a private hospital in Islamabad.
Related: US FDA authorizes Pfizer and Moderna’s updated COVID vaccines
The lack of coronavirus vaccines increased troubles for overseas passengers who have to be administered mandatory COVID booster doses for travelling abroad.
Updated COVID vaccine
Novavax’s updated vaccine has been granted emergency-use authorization by the World Health Organization (WHO) for active immunization to prevent COVID-19 in individuals aged 12 and older, the company said on Tuesday.
The updated Novavax shot, which was authorized in the U.S. last month, targets a descendant of the XBB lineage of the coronavirus that was globally predominant earlier this year.
The emergency use listing helps speed up the regulatory approvals to import and administer the vaccines by member states, according to the WHO.
Novavax missed out on the COVID-19 vaccine windfall, which benefited mRNA rivals, due to manufacturing issues that delayed its filing for regulatory approval during the peak of the pandemic.
Its original COVID shot received U.S. authorization in July 2022, long after Pfizer and Moderna vaccines were in use.
Novavax’s updated shot uses a more traditional protein-based technology than the mRNA-based vaccines by Pfizer and Moderna.
Shares of Maryland-based vaccine maker Novavax rose 1.8% to $5.6 in premarket trading.
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