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The University of Oxford has received support from European Medicines Agency's (EMA) for its vaccine targeting the deadly ...
A vaccine developed by the University of Oxford to protect people from a deadly virus has been granted support by Europe’s medicines regulator.
Nipah is seen by the World Health Organisation as a research priority because of its pandemic potential. The virus is fatal ...
The State also seems to have managed to contain the outbreak ensuring that there is no further human-to-human transmission ... with Nipah last month, is now technically free of Nipah virus ...
Spread mainly by fruit bats, Nipah virus is fatal in up to 85% of cases. Symptoms include fever, headaches, pain, vomiting ...
A vaccine developed by the University of Oxford to protect people from a deadly virus has been granted support by Europe’s medicines regulator.
Scientists have fast-tracked a vaccine for a killer virus with pandemic potential that is fatal in up to 85 per cent of cases. Nipah virus is seen by the World Health Organisation (WHO) as a research ...
Nipah is seen by the World Health Organisation as a research priority because of its pandemic potential. The virus is fatal in up to 85% of cases, initially causing fever, headaches, pain, vomiting ...
“The increasing frequency of human encounters with fruit bats and spillover into densely populated areas is expanding opportunities for Nipah virus transmission, heightening its outbreak potential.