Novosibirsk (Russia): Viral vector and mRNA vaccines, including Russia's Sputnik V, provide enough protection against the new Delta strain of the coronavirus, Head of the Novosibirsk State University's Laboratory and corresponding member of the Russian Academy of Sciences (RAS) Sergey Netesov told Sputnik. "According to data from the UK, the US and other countries, mRNA and vector vaccines, including our Sputnik V, protect against it [the Delta variant], albeit to a lesser extent, but they do protect against it. They offered 95 per cent protection against the initial strain and now they give 90% protection against the 'delta' variant," Netesov said. He added that the vaccines already developed should be used as they are quite effective.
At the end of June, Vladimir Gushchin, the head of the population variability mechanisms laboratory of the Gamaleya research centre that developed the Sputnik V vaccine, said that the Russian shots guarantee almost 100 per cent protection against severe and fatal cases of COVID-19 caused by the Delta strain. Russia became the first country in the world to register a vaccine against the coronavirus, dubbed Sputnik V, in August 2020.
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