“If you could go to the doctor and get one vaccine that essentially covers you for influenza, COVID-19 and RSV – that would be helpful,” Dr Nischal Sahai said.
“The aim is to see whether a combination vaccine will be as tolerable as giving all three vaccines separately.”
The vaccine poses a major shake-up to Australia’s annual vaccine rollout to help ease the burden on an overloaded system.
“One visit, one vaccination and possibly a booster compared to three visits and boosters,” participant Carolyn Rose said.
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“I think that will take a big load off our current health system.”
It can take several years to collate enough data before the vaccine can be rolled out safely but researchers are now looking to expand their pool of participants and are calling for more volunteers.
“We are looking for people who are generally in good health between 50 and 75 – they can be male or female,” senior clinical trial coordinator Joan Stark said.
The process includes seven clinic visits and eight phone calls over a period of up to 13 months with all participants compensated.