<p>Britain has become the first Western country to approve a Covid-19 vaccine for general use, giving the green light to the Pfizer/BioNTech drug.</p>.<p>As authorities in the US and Europe probe other candidates, here is how countries have sped up their approval procedures to face up to the pandemic.</p>.<p>Britain was able to approve the Pfizer vaccine after the independent Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) gave its all-clear.</p>.<p>The MHRA used a "rolling review" process from June to assess the vaccine in record time.</p>.<p>Teams of scientists had worked "around the clock" on different aspects of the safety assessment, often tackling several topics in parallel, MHRA chief June Raine said.</p>.<p>Health Secretary Matt Hancock and others claimed that Britain's departure from the EU had allowed it to approve the vaccine faster than its continental neighbours.</p>.<p>"Unlike the EMA (European Medicines Agency), they can ask questions as they go and obtain responses faster as a single agency," said Penny Ward, professor in pharmaceutical medicine at King's College London.</p>.<p>Raine insisted that "no corners whatsoever have been cut" in the vaccine approval process.</p>.<p>The Amsterdam-based EMA, which regulates medicines across the 27 EU countries, has also turned to a "rolling review" process for safety and effectiveness data from Covid-19 vaccine developers.</p>.<p>All three of the most advanced candidates -- Pfizer/BioNTech, Moderna and Oxford/Astrazeneca -- have been subject to the scheme for several weeks already.</p>.<p>According to the EMA, the accelerated procedures are granted for medicines "that fulfil an unmet medical need on the basis of less complete data than normally required."</p>.<p>The normal pipeline for vaccines would see all the data collected and submitted at the very start of the authorisation process.</p>.<p>An EMA decision on Pfizer/BioNTech's vaccine is expected "by December 29 at the latest", while a ruling on Moderna's version should follow by January 12.</p>.<p>It is up to the European Commission in Brussels to issue the final green light.</p>.<p>Both Pfizer/BioNTech and Moderna have requested emergency use authorisation (EUA) for their Covid-19 vaccines from the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA).</p>.<p>But the American process is slower than the British one and involves a public consultation.</p>.<p>The FDA carries out its own analysis of the vaccine and calls on an independent advisory committee.</p>.<p>"The FDA process is a completely transparent process with independent experts commenting and asking questions and recommending or advising the agency," Moncef Slaoui, scientific advisor to Washington's Operation Warp Speed (OWS) program, said Wednesday.</p>.<p>The advisory committee is scheduled for a December 10 meeting on the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine and for Moderna on December 17.</p>.<p>FDA decisions on the two drugs should follow those meetings. If the agency approves them, the vaccines could be available in the US -- the world's hardest-hit country with more than 270,000 deaths -- in December.</p>.<p>Testing on medical products under development is carried out by the Russian health ministry's "scientific centre for evaluation of medicines".</p>.<p>According to its official vaccine website, "unlike many countries, there is a system of state testing, using comparable medications, a double-blind study and other control tests independent of the developers".</p>.<p>President Vladimir Putin ordered the government to simplify procedures for state registration of some medicines, so as to speed up approval for a vaccine.</p>.<p>Testing on the country's Sputnik V vaccine began in mid-February, and on August 1 the first and second phases of clinical trials were complete.</p>.<p>Authorities approved the inoculation on August 11 before Phase 3 trials had even begun. The large-scale study is now complete, but results have not been made public.</p>.<p>Putin has told authorities to begin "large-scale" vaccinations among at-risk populations from next week.</p>.<p>The drugs should be made generally available to the Russian public in early 2021.</p>
<p>Britain has become the first Western country to approve a Covid-19 vaccine for general use, giving the green light to the Pfizer/BioNTech drug.</p>.<p>As authorities in the US and Europe probe other candidates, here is how countries have sped up their approval procedures to face up to the pandemic.</p>.<p>Britain was able to approve the Pfizer vaccine after the independent Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) gave its all-clear.</p>.<p>The MHRA used a "rolling review" process from June to assess the vaccine in record time.</p>.<p>Teams of scientists had worked "around the clock" on different aspects of the safety assessment, often tackling several topics in parallel, MHRA chief June Raine said.</p>.<p>Health Secretary Matt Hancock and others claimed that Britain's departure from the EU had allowed it to approve the vaccine faster than its continental neighbours.</p>.<p>"Unlike the EMA (European Medicines Agency), they can ask questions as they go and obtain responses faster as a single agency," said Penny Ward, professor in pharmaceutical medicine at King's College London.</p>.<p>Raine insisted that "no corners whatsoever have been cut" in the vaccine approval process.</p>.<p>The Amsterdam-based EMA, which regulates medicines across the 27 EU countries, has also turned to a "rolling review" process for safety and effectiveness data from Covid-19 vaccine developers.</p>.<p>All three of the most advanced candidates -- Pfizer/BioNTech, Moderna and Oxford/Astrazeneca -- have been subject to the scheme for several weeks already.</p>.<p>According to the EMA, the accelerated procedures are granted for medicines "that fulfil an unmet medical need on the basis of less complete data than normally required."</p>.<p>The normal pipeline for vaccines would see all the data collected and submitted at the very start of the authorisation process.</p>.<p>An EMA decision on Pfizer/BioNTech's vaccine is expected "by December 29 at the latest", while a ruling on Moderna's version should follow by January 12.</p>.<p>It is up to the European Commission in Brussels to issue the final green light.</p>.<p>Both Pfizer/BioNTech and Moderna have requested emergency use authorisation (EUA) for their Covid-19 vaccines from the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA).</p>.<p>But the American process is slower than the British one and involves a public consultation.</p>.<p>The FDA carries out its own analysis of the vaccine and calls on an independent advisory committee.</p>.<p>"The FDA process is a completely transparent process with independent experts commenting and asking questions and recommending or advising the agency," Moncef Slaoui, scientific advisor to Washington's Operation Warp Speed (OWS) program, said Wednesday.</p>.<p>The advisory committee is scheduled for a December 10 meeting on the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine and for Moderna on December 17.</p>.<p>FDA decisions on the two drugs should follow those meetings. If the agency approves them, the vaccines could be available in the US -- the world's hardest-hit country with more than 270,000 deaths -- in December.</p>.<p>Testing on medical products under development is carried out by the Russian health ministry's "scientific centre for evaluation of medicines".</p>.<p>According to its official vaccine website, "unlike many countries, there is a system of state testing, using comparable medications, a double-blind study and other control tests independent of the developers".</p>.<p>President Vladimir Putin ordered the government to simplify procedures for state registration of some medicines, so as to speed up approval for a vaccine.</p>.<p>Testing on the country's Sputnik V vaccine began in mid-February, and on August 1 the first and second phases of clinical trials were complete.</p>.<p>Authorities approved the inoculation on August 11 before Phase 3 trials had even begun. The large-scale study is now complete, but results have not been made public.</p>.<p>Putin has told authorities to begin "large-scale" vaccinations among at-risk populations from next week.</p>.<p>The drugs should be made generally available to the Russian public in early 2021.</p>