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Editor s letter

Editor’s letter A month before the first American died of the coronavirus, scientists already had designed the vaccine. In a Massachusetts lab last Jan. 13, Moderna researchers used the genetic sequence of the virus, made public by China, to design an mRNA molecule that teaches the immune system to recognize and neutralize it. By February, their vaccine had actually been made and shipped to the National Institutes of Health to start clinical trials. This largely unknown time line shows that while development of coronavirus vaccines was astonishingly rapid, approval of them was painstaking: More than 300,000 Americans died and 16 million were infected while a nearly miraculous solution underwent testing and approval. “For the entire span of the pandemic in this country,” David Wallace-Wells said last week in

Somebody has to do it : Volunteers help push COVID-19 vaccines toward the finish line

Somebody has to do it : Volunteers help push COVID-19 vaccines toward the finish line Amanda Morris, Arizona Republic Corrections & Clarifications: Rachel Gomez-Acosta s age was incorrect in a previous version of this article. Chris Eriksen thought of his fifth-grade students at Phoenix Country Day School as a medical worker administered the shot. The students had endured months of isolation when the coronavirus forced schools to close and shifted online. © Amanda Morris Chris Erikson is a volunteer in Moderna s experimental COVID-19 vaccine trial. As he tracked his own symptoms afterward, he thought of his late mother-in-law, who died from COVID-19 a few weeks earlier.

Editor s letter

Editor s letter
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