WHO may reject Canadian-made Medicago COVID-19 vaccine because of ties to big tobacco
OTTAWA — Canada may not be able to donate millions of doses of the only COVID-19 vaccine made in the country because the World Health Organization is leaning against granting it an emergency-use licence.
Medicago’s two-dose Covifenz vaccine was authorized by Health Canada in February for adults 18 to 64. In clinical trials it was more than 70 per cent effective at preventing COVID-19 infections and 100 per cent effective against severe illness, prior to the Omicron wave.
Medicago has also submitted an application to get their vaccine — the only one in the world that uses vaccine-like particles grown in a plant — approved by the World Health Organization.
However, tobacco company Philip Morris owns about one-fifth of Medicago, and the WHO indicated Wednesday that the application was unlikely to proceed for that reason.


