KEY POINTS
  • British-Swedish drugmaker AstraZeneca is fighting battles on several fronts this week.
  • It is having to defend its coronavirus vaccine from reports that it could be less effective in protecting the elderly.
  • It also faces increasing tensions with the EU over its delayed supplies to the bloc.

In this article

A laboratory technicians handles vials of the University of Oxford's Covid-19 vaccine.

British-Swedish drugmaker AstraZeneca is fighting battles on several fronts this week — defending its coronavirus vaccine from reports that it could be less effective in protecting the elderly and facing increasing tensions with the EU over its delayed supplies to the bloc.

On Monday, the drugmaker defended its vaccine from reports in several German newspapers, Bild and Handelsblatt, that the AstraZeneca vaccine, created in conjunction with the University of Oxford, had a low efficacy rate (of less than 10% and 8%, the papers said, respectively) in the over-65s, the main target group for having the vaccine as they are more at risk of serious disease and death.

In this article