Bourla answers the questions you're all asking. Good morning.
I celebrated the anniversary of the pandemic yesterday by getting my second shot of the Pfizer vaccine, and then having a conversation with Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla. (No connection between the two, and no queue–jumping involved. I qualify by age and sat in a long line in the Lord & Taylor’s parking lot in Stamford, Ct., to get my turn.)
I asked Bourla to reflect on the anniversary. His response:
“I think it is very impressive that a year from a major disaster for humanity, we are emerging with a sense of liberation. To see the Israeli ministry of health with their data so revealing of what a vaccine can do for society—that is the best demonstration of the power of science and the power of human ingenuity.”
If you missed it, the Israeli news is here. What it shows is that the vaccine is highly effective in preventing “symptomatic” as well as “asymptomatic” infections—meaning it is highly unlikely a vaccinated person can be infected or spread infection.
I asked Bourla many of the questions people have been asking me:
Can I travel without risk, now that I’ve been vaccinated?
“Our data demonstrate efficacy from the seventh day. Everybody else demonstrated efficacy from 14 days. You are very reduced risk. Nothing is 100% in biology.”
Can I spread the disease to others?
“The Israeli minister said they saw 94% protection from asymptomatic disease. This is extremely, extremely good news.”
Is there evidence suggesting one of the new variants is not susceptible to the vaccine?
“With everything we see and know right now, we believe the current vaccine is effective against all three variants—South African, Brazilian and U.K. With the U.K., we have clinical evidence.”
Will I have to get a booster?
“I think there is a very high chance that everybody will be getting a booster annually…There are scenarios where you might need one sooner.”
Will you require Pfizer employees to be vaccinated before returning to the workplace?
“We don’t require, we don’t mandate it. The right to work is a basic right…(But) you can create incentives for people to be vaccinated, by requiring it to go to the cinema or to go to a concert or to go to a sporting event.”
Pfizer has had an amazing year of innovation. Do you think co-locating in an office spurs innovation?
“We can only guess right now….What we learned from COVID is the virtual experience can replace a very big part of what we thought before was irreplaceable…. But…it is not the same if you haven’t met before. It is also true that a building is a center of culture. It creates essential belonging…Our expectation is that you will come to work two or three days a week and you will stay home two or three days a week.”
Are you changing your offices?
“Big time. I will be in an open space office. The whole building will be open space, with very few dedicated seats.”
More news below.
Alan Murray @alansmurray alan.murray@fortune.com
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Novavax results
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Vaccine geopolitics
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Anti-espionage
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This edition of CEO Daily was edited by David Meyer.
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