Chinese vaccinations ramp up as winter spurs virus spread
Nation to inoculate 50m people ahead of Spring Festival
More Chinese cities have begun mass COVID- 19 vaccinations after the New Year holidays as China has approved its first domestically produced vaccine for general use and expanded its scope of vaccination during the winter and spring seasons with the country soon embracing its largest holiday travel season by mid- February.
Given the goal of vaccinating 50 million people ahead of the 2021 Spring Festival holidays, cities including Beijing, Shanghai, Shenzhen in South China’s Guangdong Province, Lüliang in North China’s Shanxi Province, and Linyi in East China’s Shandong Province have already started mass inoculations of vaccines, covering nine key groups of people. Beijing has vaccinated in total 73,537 people across 220 inoculation venues since the mass vaccinations began on Friday.
Related venues in other cities vaccinate on average 100 to 2,000 people each day, some local medics in Shandong and Shanxi told the Global Times on Monday.
When some Western media outlets continue to question the safety
and efficacy of Chinese- made vaccines after China’s top regulator officially approved it on Thursday for general use with conditions such as age restrictions and health status, more countries including Indonesia and Egypt embraced COVID- 19 vaccines produced by Chinese manufacturers, underscoring their full confidence in Chinese vaccines, as China has been taking a different approach to vaccine development with a highly cautious attitude while continuing to accumulate experience.
Mass vaccinations underway
In Beijing’s Chaoyang district, where more than 2,000 people were injected in a single day on Monday, the Global Times reporters saw groups of people line up for their first doses of the recently approved COVID- 19 vaccine developed by China National Pharmaceutical Group Corp ( Sinopharm). They mostly work in the cold- chain, food or logistics sectors, echoing the Chinese authorities’ vaccination plan of covering nine key groups of people at the present.
The whole process takes around 50 minutes, including a 30- minute medical observation period after the injection. Everyone was provided with detailed information about the inoculation and personal consultations regarding safety concerns before they moved on to the injection area to get their first- in- their- life dose against the novel coronavirus.
Medical workers ask people to check the vaccine type and validity before administering the shots. Each vaccine can be traced back to its source via a code, and each individual’s vaccination data is promptly recorded and then reported to the national Chinese Center for Disease
Control and Prevention ( CDC) system, medical workers said.
The emergency room set up at the vaccination site is equipped with first aid facilities such as ventilators and defibrillators as well as professional rescue staff. An ambulance is parked outside the vaccination site to respond in case anyone has a serious adverse reaction.
Monday was the fourth day since the Chinese government gave the green light for the first domestically produced vaccine for general use. Given the recent sporadic outbreaks in several Chinese cities and the cold weather that spurred the virus to be more active, local CDCs and hospitals across the country have been undertaking vaccinations covering thousands of people every day, who also need immunity to the virus the most.
Compared to some chaotic and disorderly vaccine distribution scenarios in certain cities and states across the US, such as Florida, Chinese cities have been rolling out large- scale vaccinations in an orderly fashion, and local medics in different places have finished the relevant training in order to respond to emergency situations.
A local medical staffer at an inoculation site in Lüliang said on Monday, “We have been fully prepared as local authorities recently began mass vaccinations for key groups of people, with computer systems upgraded and vaccine distribution ready.”
However, in some places outside China, the beginning of mass vaccinations were seen as “chaotic.” In the US, where medics have started receiving COVID- 19 vaccines, some described the distribution unfair as the ones with the most exposure to the virus are not always the first to be vaccinated. Even the decision to approve COVID- 19 inoculations for senior citizens in Florida spurred long lines at vaccination sites and a deluge of people crashing national computer systems and hospital mobile banking service to schedule their shots, according to media reports.
Cautiously moving forward
China has officially initiated vaccinations for key groups of people since December 15, 2020 with over 3 million doses of coronavirus vaccines having been administered, according to Zeng Yixin, deputy director of the National Health Commission. And with the approval of the Chinesemade vaccine and the sped- up supply capacity, mass vaccinations will then fully cover elderly people, groups with higher risks of underlying diseases before being carried out among the general public, Zeng told a press conference on Thursday.
When some foreign media highlighted Chinese- made COVID- 19 vaccines as not covering elderly people in the first round of mass vaccinations as a so- called argument for questioning their safety, with countries like Germany giving out vaccines to elderly people as a priority, a Beijing- based immunologist who preferred not to be named told the Global Times on Monday that China takes a highly cautious approach to rolling out the vaccines, which is also different from the West.