First doses of Pfizer coronavirus vaccine have flown to US from Belgium: report

Authored by msn.com and submitted by Juicyjackson

The first doses of Pfizer's coronavirus vaccine candidate have been flown over to the U.S. from Belgium, a source familiar with United Airlines' COVID Vaccine Readiness Task Team planning confirmed to NBC on Saturday.

© Getty Images First doses of Pfizer coronavirus vaccine have flown to US from Belgium: report

On Friday, the Wall Street Journal reported that United commenced chartering flights to send doses of the vaccine to the United States. In a statement to The Hill on Friday, the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) also confirmed that it was "supporting the first mass air shipment of a vaccine."

A source told the network the FAA is allowing United to carry 15,000 pounds of dry ice per flight, which is five times over the permitted limit.

Pfizer's vaccine must be kept at below-freezing temperatures to maintain efficacy of the dosages.

United would not confirm details of the flight to The Hill but said it would "support a vaccine distribution effort on a global scale," noting its shipment run is through the United Cargo division of the airline.

Pfizer's vaccine candidate is developed in partnership with the German biotechnology company BioNTech, and last week, Pfizer applied for emergency use authorization (EUA) with the Food and Drug Administration (FDA). The vaccine will be distributed once it is approved.

According to a Financial Times Saturday report, the United Kingdom is slated to approve Pfizer's vaccine as early as next week.

skeebidybop on November 29th, 2020 at 00:26 UTC »

You know what’s amazing? The coronavirus first arrived on our shores about 10 to 11 months ago. And look at how much historic progress we are rapidly making on the COVID vaccines!

I am very proud of humanity’s biomedical science.

One_Equipment on November 29th, 2020 at 00:26 UTC »

It's the beginning of the end, boys! I know this might've been said tens of thousands of times but for a pandemic virus we knew nothing about in January, a working vaccine being shipped 11 months later is a truly extraordinary feat.

Juicyjackson on November 29th, 2020 at 00:25 UTC »

I am hoping to god that all the logistics work out perfectly and we can stay on track for 20 million people vaccinated in the US by the end of 2020.