Wednesday January 22, 2025

Israel begins human trials on COVID-19 vaccine

Published : 01 Nov 2020, 21:34

Updated : 01 Nov 2020, 21:44

  DF News Desk
An Israeli medical worker shows a seasonal flu vaccine at a Clalit Health Services center in central Israeli city of Bat Yam on Oct. 15, 2020. File Photo Xinhua.

Israel began human trials of a COVID-19 vaccine on Sunday, Hadassah and Sheba Medical Centers said, reported Xinhua.

In Sheba hospital, located in central Israel, a 26-year-old business student was injected with the novel "BriLife" vaccine created by the Israeli Institute of Biological Research (IIBR).

Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who visited Sheba hospital on Sunday, said that "the true exit from the coronavirus crisis is in the development of vaccines. Therefore, this is a very important day, which gives a shot of encouragement."

At the same time, another 34-year-old volunteer was vaccinated at Hadassah Hospital in Jerusalem.

This month, about 80 more volunteers will be vaccinated at the two hospitals, with half receiving a vaccine and the others receiving a placebo vaccine.

Then, over a period of three weeks, the researchers will test whether the volunteers vaccinated developed antibodies.

The second phase, scheduled for December, will include safety tests to be conducted on 960 volunteers.

In the third and final phase, in about six months, the effectiveness of the vaccine will be tested with the participation of up to 30,000 volunteers.

IIBR, a governmental institute founded in 1952 and located in the central city of Ness Ziona, deals with applied research in the fields of biology, microbiology, medical chemistry, natural sciences and environmental sciences.