But Sir John Bell, Regius Professor of medicine at Oxford, leading the vaccine development programme, also told the committee that the UK should be getting ready for … When asked by what time … 'Sir John Bell, Regius professor of medicine at Oxford University, said 'several hundred' people have now been given the jab in the first British trial to find a vaccine.Pictured: The University of Oxford's Old Road Campus, which houses the Jenner Institute and is where human trials of a coronavirus vaccine are taking placeMr Soriot also said there is agreement between companies within the pharmaceutical industry to help one another with production, and that the intention is to supply the vaccine free of charge during the pandemic.Vaccination of volunteers for coronavirus began last week, with 510 signed up for the first clinical trial run by the University of Oxford.Sir John Bell, Regius professor of medicine at Oxford University, said 'several hundred' people have now been given the jab in the first British trial to find a vaccine for coronavirusHe tweeted: 'The Oxford vaccine is one of the most advanced in the world.

Mr Soriot added he hoped that the vaccine would not be the only one produced.He added 30 to 40 million doses will be needed to be able to inoculate vulnerable people immediately, explaining: 'Once we get an approval by the regulators, we don't want to have to go back to the beginning and work out how we manufacture it at scale.We are no longer accepting comments on this article.The views expressed in the contents above are those of our users and do not necessarily reflect the views of MailOnline.Published by Associated Newspapers LtdVaccination of volunteers for coronavirus began last week, with 510 signed up for the first clinical trial run by the University of Oxford (Pictured: Elisa Granato being injected as part of human trials in the UK for a coronavirus vaccine)'The demand, as you can imagine, will be large if vaccines work, and my hope is that several vaccines will be available to supply the needs of the various countries around the world,' he said.The comments below have not been moderated.Injected into human muscle cells, it encourages the cells to produce the protein that forms the 'spikes' on the outside of the coronavirus.Professor Bell said AstraZeneca would have a 'big job' in the UK because manufacturing capacity for vaccines 'isn't where it needs to be'.Professor Bell said the NHS will have priority access to the inoculation, which will be provided on a cost-only basis during the pandemic, if it proves to be effective.A team at the University of Oxford, who are among the frontrunners in the race to find a vaccine, have joined forces with pharmaceutical giant AstraZeneca to try to mass-produce it if their vaccine is successful.There are more than 70 potential vaccines being developed around the world, and Imperial College London will begin recruiting for its own trial in June.Part of the Daily Mail, The Mail on Sunday & Metro Media GroupThe team are using a weakened version of a virus which causes chimpanzees to get common colds, but cannot cause illness in humans.

'A team at the University of Oxford, who are among the frontrunners in the race to find a vaccine, have joined forces with pharmaceutical giant AstraZeneca to try to mass-produce it if their vaccine is successful (Pictured: The Old Road Campus of the University of Oxford)Pictured: A tester wearing personal protective equipment (PPE) holds a test swab at a drive through coronavirus testing site at IKEA in Wembley, north London'We also want to make sure that the rest of the world will be ready to make this vaccine at scale so that it gets to populations in developing countries, for example, where the need is very great.' Sir John Bell, Regius Professor of Medicine at Oxford University is working on the development of a Covid-19 vaccine. "All the other vaccine manufacturers are now following exactly the plant that we put into place back in January.

To determine if the vaccine works, infection rates between the two groups will be compared. “People occasionally talked about flu but very little was done. 'If AstraZeneca makes [the vaccine] here, which they will, they've agreed to prioritise the UK. Sir John Bell, regius professor of medicine at Oxford University, criticised the lack of pandemic planning in the UK and particularly the absence of manufacturing capacity for vaccines. A coronavirusvaccine could possibly be available by Autumn, according to Oxford University trial leader, Sir John Bell. A coronavirus vaccine could possibly be available by Autumn, according to Oxford University trial leader, Sir John Bell. We’ve had three flu epidemics or near-flu epidemics, two Sars episodes, one Mers episode, Zika and Ebola, and any one of those could have blown up to be exactly what we’ve got now, so this needs become part of our national health security infrastructure.”He said it would be important to immunise as many vulnerable and older people as possible against flu before the winter.