Global Times

Rabies scandal rocks China’s vaccine industry

Doubts could turn consumers to foreign drugs, prompt tough regulation­s: experts

- By Wang Cong

A brewing scandal over violations of drug production regulation­s by one of China’s largest vaccine manufactur­ers, which has sparked nationwide outrage, could pose serious challenges for a domestic industry that has seen rapid growth in recent years but experience­d a series of scandals.

The growing concerns over the safety of the whole domestic vaccine industry, triggered by the Changchun Changsheng incidents, could also turn Chinese consumers to foreign alternativ­es and prompt tougher regulation­s. These factors are likely to rein in the skyrocketi­ng profits of domestic companies, experts noted.

The outrage started when the China Food and Drug Administra­tion (CFDA) released a statement on July 15, saying an investigat­ion into Changchun Changsheng Life Sciences found that the company has seriously violated drug production quality management regulation­s, including forging production records on rabie vanccine. The probe was launched after the CFDA received complaints.

The situation further escalated after the CFDA on July 19 announced penalties on Changsheng resulted from another separate probe into the company launched in November 2017. The company was found selling substandar­d vaccines back that time.

Finger-pointing continues regarding the Changsheng incident, with some blaming authoritie­s for a lack of proper oversight and others pointing to dishonest companies that only seek profits and ignore the safety of millions of patients across the country.

But experts noted that the key root behind the frequent incident of problemati­c vaccine is that punishment for companies that violate regulation­s is too light, prompting some companies to take risks.

“If regulation is not tough, companies will always seek (to maximize) profits. Unless there’s a major problem, companies will cut production costs as much as they can,” a Beijing-based expert told the Global Times, speaking on condition of anonymity.

“If this kind of life and death [violation] could result in the death penalty, companies wouldn’t dare do it.” Beijing-based industry expert

“If this kind of life and death [violation] could result in the death penalty, companies wouldn’t dare do it

In the case of Changsheng for violations of selling substandar­d products in October 2017, the comas pany was only fined about 2.58 million yuan ($381,323) in addition to 858,840 yuan being confiscate­d, according to a Changsheng filing to the Shenzhen Stock Exchange on Thursday. “The public’s distrust of domescompa­nies has only intennd sified an after this incident, some might acctually turn to foreign vacstead of domestic ones,” Li Tianquan, co-founder of domesthcar­e big data platform yaozh.com told the Global Times day. “Domestic companies will mostly likely face some of the toughest regulation­s.” The Chinese vaccine market has grown rapidly in recent years on the strength of increased government support for healthcare and rising parental attention to having children vaccinated, Li noted. As a result, domestic companies have prospered.

Vaccine companies are some of the most profitable enterprise­s in China, with 52 vaccine-focused companies listed on the A-share market averaging a gross margin of 50 percent in the first quarter of 2018, according to a report in the Beijing News.

Changsheng’s gross margin was the highest, reaching 91.59 percent.

“With all of these producers, it is hard to imagine that they will grow as fast as they have,” Li said, while stressing that “the overall environmen­t is good” for the domestic industry’s long-term growth. “This goes in the right direction toward better regulation­s and betterqual­ity vaccines.”

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 ?? File photo: IC ?? Chinese workers manufactur­e doses of the H1N1 flu vaccine at the plant of Changchun Changsheng Life Sciences in Changchun, capital of Northeast China’s Jilin Province in 2009.
File photo: IC Chinese workers manufactur­e doses of the H1N1 flu vaccine at the plant of Changchun Changsheng Life Sciences in Changchun, capital of Northeast China’s Jilin Province in 2009.
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