If you were to ask me, the answer would be "yes." Of course, no one has asked me so it's a moot point.
>>>Should scientists infect healthy people with the coronavirus to test vaccines?
Radical proposal to conduct ‘human challenge’ studies could dramatically speed up vaccine research. . . .
Many scientists see a vaccine as the only solution to the pandemic. Clinical safety trials began this month for one candidate vaccine, and others will soon follow. But one of the biggest hurdles will be showing that a vaccine works. Typically, this is done through large phase III studies, in which thousands to tens of thousands of people receive either a vaccine or a placebo, and researchers track who becomes infected in the course of their daily lives.
A quicker option would be to conduct a ‘human challenge’ study, argue scientists in a provocative paper this month. This would involve exposing perhaps 100 healthy young people to the virus and seeing whether those who get the vaccine escape infection.
Nir Eyal, the director of the Center for Population-Level Bioethics at Rutgers University in New Brunswick, New Jersey, and lead author of the preprint, tells
Nature how the study could be done safely and ethically. Participants, he argues, might even be better off for it.<<<
Radical proposal to conduct ‘human challenge’ studies could dramatically speed up vaccine research.
www.nature.com