A post on Facebook incorrectly claims that vaccines are unapproved and experimental, and that all the animals used in trials died.
The author does not specify that they are discussing the Covid-19 vaccines, but the claims are very similar to ones we have checked before about the Covid-19 vaccines and several comments refer to them.
Honesty in public debate matters
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Covid-19 vaccines have been approved for use in UK
It is untrue that vaccines for Covid-19 have not been approved for use.
All three of the vaccines currently in use in the UK (Pfizer, AstraZeneca and Moderna) have been authorised for use. A fourth, Janssen has been authorised, but is not yet in use.
Across the UK, the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine has a temporary authorisation (sometimes known as a regulation 174 authorisation) issued by the MHRA.
In Great Britain, the Oxford-AstraZeneca, Moderna and Janssen vaccines have another type of authorisation, called a “conditional marketing authorisation” which has been issued by the Medicines and Healthcare productsRegulatory Agency (MHRA).
The MHRA has previously told Full Fact that temporary authorisation and conditional marketing authorisations are “regulatory tools that enable medicines to be approved at the earliest time possible during an emergency situation, as soon as there are robust data to show that the benefits outweigh the risks”.
We have written more about the difference between these types of authorisation before.
Animals in Covid-19 vaccine trials were euthanised
As we have also written before, it is true that the animals involved in Covid-19 trials died—but this doesn’t mean the vaccines are unsafe for human use.
Chris Magee, head of policy and media at UK non-profit Understanding Animal Research, previously told Full Fact that animals used in drug trials are usually euthanised, so scientists can examine their internal organs for signs of pathology.
In other words, the animals died but were not killed by the vaccine.
Mr Magee also said that data already existed to indicate the vaccines were safe, which enabled researchers to run animal trials alongside the early stages of human trials.
Had the animals died during this process, he said, the human trials would have been immediately halted. The fact that they were not indicates the animals did not die unexpectedly.