Russian Military Volunteers to Test Homegrown COVID-19 Vaccine

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After weeks of research in the fight against coronavirus around the world, potential medications are starting to be tested. In Russia, the Defense Ministry has chosen 50 volunteers for clinical trials of a new Covid-19 vaccine, Russia Today informed.

“Fifty military personnel were selected to test the safety and effectiveness of the vaccine, including five women, who voluntarily expressed their desire to participate in the trialing of a modern drug. All candidates underwent preliminary examination and testing, and, for a month, they were not diagnosed with any diseases,” the ministry said.

Clinical testing of the vaccine will be carried out at the 48th Central Research Institute of the Ministry of Defense, which has previously been the home to other medical trials. In the past, vaccines against Ebola, Middle Eastern respiratory syndrome (MERS), and the flu have been studied and successfully tested at the facility. The first group of volunteers will arrive on Wednesday.

The Defense Ministry trial will be the first time this vaccine has been officially tested. On May 22, it was announced that the same promising anti-coronavirus vaccine was unofficially but successfully tested by researchers, who injected themselves. They reported no side-effects. On May 26, Defense Minister Sergey Shoigu promised President Vladimir Putin that the military would complete clinical trials of the vaccine before the end of July.

Speaking about the full range of potential Covid-19 vaccines, Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Chernyshenko said that mass vaccination may begin in the fall of 2020, if clinical trials successfully find an effective option.