The coroner veccine may be ready by September

The coroner veccine may be ready by September
coroner's vaccine
A coronavirus vaccine is likely to be ready by September. That's what a professor of vaccine at Oxford University claims. The Oxford professor's name is Sarah Gilbert. On saturday, he told The Times magazine in the UK about the coroner's vaccine. Already, 1 million 8,000 people have died of coronary disease worldwide.

 And the number of coronary people in the world is about 17 million 76 thousand. Vigorous efforts are being made in several countries to develop the vaccine for the Covid-19 disease caused by the coronavirus. Oxford's Sarah is also involved in the global effort.

Sarah said she is 80 percent confident that her research team will work on the treatment of Covid-19 disease.

Sarah said she is 80 percent confident that her research team will work on the treatment of Covid-19 disease.

Sarah said they will be testing the vaccine they invented in the next two weeks. Sarah's team is working to make the vaccine faster. In this regard, Sarah she is working seven days a week.

Sarah warned as well as expected. He said no one could swear right now that the vaccine would work.

Other researchers have previously reported that the vaccine for the Covid-19 disease may take 12 to 18 months. Now Oxford researchers say it will take six months.

Sarah said the vaccine will be ready by September if everything goes well. He hopes the vaccine will help cure Covid-19 disease.

Sarah said she was in talks with the British government on funding and production for vaccine production.




 *This report has been rewritten in English by Rakibul Hasan.*