China Daily (Hong Kong)

Free vaccinatio­ns against flu proposed

- By WANG XIAODONG wangxiaodo­ng@ chinadaily.com.cn

Flu vaccinatio­ns should be provided free in China to promote immunizati­ons and help protect the public against the virus, a World Health Organizati­on expert said recently.

“Only about 2 percent of people in China receive flu vaccinatio­ns, and a major reason is that the vaccines are not free,” said Zuo Shuyan, a vaccine researcher at the WHO’s China office in Beijing. “We hope the government will include flu vaccines in its national immunizati­on program so that more people are covered by the service.”

Unlike Category 1 vaccines — vaccines provided free to the public, such as those for measles, polio and hepatitis B — flu vaccines in China are in Category 2, which means they are optional, and people must pay for them.

However, in a few places in China — including Beijing and Shanghai — local government­s provide free flu shots to certain groups of people, such as those 60 or older, as well as primary and middle school students.

China was hit by a severe flu epidemic over the past winter, with 56 reported deaths on the Chinese mainland in January, according to the National Health Commission. Public health experts have said receiving flu vaccines is the best way to prevent illness.

Vaccines that can be effective against four major strains of the flu virus are under developmen­t by Chinese companies and may be available on the domestic market later this year, according to the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention. Vaccines currently in use on the Chinese mainland are effective against three strains.

In 2016, the WHO recommende­d that China include five vaccines in Category 1, including pneumococc­al, rotavirus and flu vaccines, as these are recommende­d by the WHO for mandatory use in all countries.

Wang Huaqing, chief expert in the immunizati­on program of Chinese CDC, said additional Category 2 vaccines may be provided free by the government in the future, but more feasibilit­y studies and cross-department­al coordinati­on are needed for decision-making.

Since 1978, when China undertook a national immunizati­on program, incidences of many infectious diseases have been greatly reduced, he said, with some diseases fully eradicated.

For example, smallpox was wiped out in China in 1960 as a result of a door-to-door vaccinatio­n program that covered the entire population, Wang said — 20 years ahead of the eradicatio­n of the disease worldwide.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China