China says 1 million vaccines have been given; Plans for further rollout

Photographer: Lintao Zhang / Getty Images AsiaPac

China said it has already administered more than 1 million coronavirus vaccines since July and plans to distribute more, initially targeting workers in industries where they are at higher risk of infection as the country aims to be at the forefront of the global Covid-19 immunization effort.

Vaccines developed by Sinovac Biotech Ltd. and the state-owned China National Biotec Group Co., known as CNBG issued in the country since they got emergency use clearance in July.

China is now planning a wider distribution of the experimental shots to those working in hospitals, customs, public transport and cold chain logistics, as well as vulnerable groups, including those with pre-existing medical conditions, to receive them first . At a later stage in the rollout, the general public will be involved, Zeng Yixin, deputy minister at China’s National Health Commission, told reporters in Beijing on Saturday.

Zeng said colder weather with the onset of winter is challenging China’s control of the virus, which it has nearly eliminated internally with a combination of strict border controls and mass testing.

“Our goal is to establish immunity to the herd through vaccinations so that Covid-19 can be quickly and effectively controlled,” he said.

Two shots

The vaccine figure puts China well ahead of the US and UK, which only recently approved emergencies developed by drug giant Pfizer Inc. and the German BioNTech SE, which allowed them to vaccinate people in specific target groups. The United States. also has a Covid-19 vaccine from Moderna Inc. on Friday. Russia, which says it is already providing homegrown photos to its population, has vaccinated 320,000 people, according to Bloomberg data.

The 1 million figure refers to the doses administered, not the number of doses inoculated. CNBG chairman Yang Xiaoming recently said more than 650,000 people have been vaccinated with Chinese vaccines according to locals media reports. Both CNBG and Sinovac candidates follow a regimen of two shots from a first shot and then a booster.

Follow the worldwide rollout of vaccines here, with Bloomberg‘s tracker

While Chinese officials have not disclosed how many people will be vaccinated in the next stages of the vaccination effort, Bloomberg reported on Friday that authorities plan to administer locally developed injections. as many as 50 million workers who are at high risk of exposure to the virus in early February, a significant expansion that will mobilize the local branches of China’s Center for Disease Control and Prevention, medical clinics and hospitals to reach the ambitious goal .

Virus attacks

The rollout, which comes amid speculation that China’s drug regulator is close to signing the CNBG and Sinovac general-purpose vaccines, would be roughly the equivalent of inoculating South Korea’s entire population in less than two months, a step that country well ahead of the distribution race if it succeeds. China’s rapid implementation of coronavirus testing in recent months, with millions tested several days after cases were identified, could provide a model for how the nation of 1.4 billion people plans to approach vaccine rollout.

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