I agree completely. Watching the bad news which is endless, gets tiresome. It's far better for me at least, to get as much information as possible about the research to find a vaccine. We all know that it typically takes at least a year to find these but I tend to believe considering the deadly nature of this bug, that the time frame might be somewhat less.
I agree, it can be depressing to take in the whole scale of it all.
I don't see how we can get a safe vaccine in less than a year, but I'm happy to be proven wrong. The problem is, as Michael Osterholm said in an interview, he can "invent" a vaccine in an afternoon. But it has to be proven safe/effective in animal models, then it has to be proven safe and effective in limited human trials, it has to be manufacturerable on a large scale...more will fail somewhere along that line for one reason or another. All will take time. Hopefully the process can be streamline as efficiently as safety will allow.
However, remember the test kit debacle. You wouldn't want to rush something out shoddily and inject the whole country with it that turns out to cause leukemia in 2 years. That would be a big oops.
I suspect way before that we will at least get drugs that can help reduce the CFR and control the damage. Hydroxychloroquine might be one of those. Probably not a miracle cure, but one of many that might have some benefit.
In my opinion though, a lot of those "Miracle Malaria Drug!", "Vaccine Found!" articles are some of the most cynical click-bait there is.