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The rollout of the COVID-19 vaccines by India has &quot;rescued the world&quot; from the deadly coronavirus and the contributions by the country must not be underestimated, a top US scientist has said.</p>
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Dr Peter Hotez, Dean of the National School of Tropical Medicine at Baylor College of Medicine (BCM) in Houston during a recent webinar said that the two mRNA vaccines (Pfizer and Moderna) may not impact the world&#39;s low and middle income countries, but India&#39;s vaccines, made in collaboration with universities across the world such as Oxford University, have &quot;rescued the world&quot; and its contributions must not be underestimated, a PTI report from Houston quoted him as saying.</p>
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During the webinar, &quot;COVID-19: Vaccination and Potential Return to Normalcy – If and When&quot;, Dr Hotez, an internationally-recognised physician-scientist in neglected tropical diseases and vaccine development, said that the COVID-19 vaccine rollout is &quot;India&#39;s gift&#39;&#39; to the world in combating the virus.</p>
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&quot;This is something very special and I see it myself because I&#39;m on weekly teleconferences with our colleagues in India, you make a recommendation, and within days it&#39;s done and not only done, but it&#39;s done well and with incredible rigor and thought and creativity,&quot; Dr Hotez said, stressing that he felt compelled to make this statement because &quot;India&#39;s huge efforts in combating global pandemic is a story that&#39;s not really getting out in the world.&quot;</p>
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Dr Hotez, considered as the authority on vaccinations, is working on an affordable coronavirus vaccine in collaboration with Indian pharmaceutical companies.</p>
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Consul General of India in Houston, Aseem Mahajan, along with a distinguished panel of doctors participated in the webinar organized by Indo American Chamber of Commerce of Greater Houston (IACCGH).</p>
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&nbsp;India-made coronavirus vaccines have already been provided to 25 countries while another 49 nations are in the queue. India is currently producing the Covishield, produced at the Pune-based Serum Institute of India in collaboration with British pharma major AstraZeneca and Oxford University, and Covaxin, indigenously developed jointly by Hyderabad-based Bharat Biotech and Indian Council of Medical Research scientists. Covaxin has cleared the phase 3 human trials, in which it was administered to 28,000 individuals, with an efficacy rate of 81%.</p>
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There is a growing demand for Indian vaccines as the country has emerged as the &ldquo;pharmacy of the world&rdquo; amid the huge shortage that has developed for the shots worldwide.</p>
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Indian vaccines are much cheaper and easier to handle as they can be stored at ordinary refrigeration temperatures of 2 to 8 degrees Celsius making them affordable for developing countries. The western-made Pfizer and Moderna vaccines, on the other hand, are very expensive and have to be stored at -80 degrees Celsius and require expensive cold-chain infrastructure that does not exist in most countries.</p>
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