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Cincinnati Researchers Developing And Testing A Universal Flu Vaccine

A woman gets a flu shot at a Children's event in 2019. Researchers there are among the few locally and world-wide studying a universal vaccine for the virus that has multiple strains.
Courtesy of Cincinnati Children's
A woman gets a flu shot at a Children's event in 2019. Researchers there are among the few locally and world-wide studying a universal vaccine for the virus that has multiple strains.

It may not be surprising that the COVID vaccine is more effective than the flu shot. Scientists in Cincinnati are hard at work developing and testing what would be a holy grail - a universal flu vaccine that would protect in one dose against all strains of the flu.

, based in Norwood, is working with scientists at Oxford University in the United Kingdom to develop and test a universal flu vaccine. Research has been somewhat slowed by the pandemic, but Blue Water CEO Joseph Hernandez explains the company will begin testing it in people next year.

Blue Water is using a mathematical model to protect people against all strains of influenza during their lifetime, .

Hernandez and his researchers have done additional work with an evolving influenza strain out of China, the .

"It's primarily in swine but we've seen some evidence of the virus actually jumping into humans and it's got a really high mortality rate and so we're concerned," he says. "If the virus is able to propagate in humans it could be serious, even more serious than COVID-19." 

Hernandez says he thinks COVID has amplified the interest in vaccines in general.

Meanwhile, atresearchers are busy testing a universal flu vaccine developed by Mt. Sinai. Pediatric Professor David Bernstein, MD, says the vaccine did what doctors hoped.

"The antibodies that we got were indeed broad, so they neutralized a number of strains and that's the first stop and did last for two years," he says. This research was published in the

Cincinnati Children's doctors are also looking at other factors. Dr. Bernstein says when you are exposed to the flu as a child you are "imprinted" to respond best to that strain. "So when you're infected years later with some different strain, your body reacts more so to that original one than the new one and that's why we're not so well protected."

will examine that.

Then there are other questions, like how the human immune system builds defenses against the flu. Cincinnati Children鈥檚 is playing a leading role in that. It is tracking flu exposure and vaccine response among 2,000 sets of mothers and infants from the Cincinnati area and Mexico City.

Copyright 2021 91.7 WVXU. To see more, visit .

With more than 30 years of journalism experience in the Greater Cincinnati market, Ann Thompson brings a wealth of knowledge and expertise to her reporting. She has reported for WKRC, WCKY, WHIO-TV, Metro Networks and CBS/ABC Radio. Her work has been recognized by the Associated Press and the Society of Professional Journalists. In 2019 and 2011 A-P named her 鈥淏est Reporter鈥 for large market radio in Ohio. She has won awards from the Association of Women in Communications and the Alliance for Women in Media. Ann reports regularly on science and technology in Focus on Technology.
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