China Daily

Experts being sent out to ensure vaccine safety

- By WANG XIAODONG wangxiaodo­ng@ chinadaily.com.cn

China’s top health authority has begun sending out supervisor­y teams across the country to ensure that people who may have received substandar­d rabies vaccines have access to remedial services.

On Tuesday, the National Health Commission began dispatchin­g teams consisting of officials, public health experts and doctors to all provinces, autonomous regions and municipali­ties to supervise local authoritie­s in carrying out services for those who have received rabies vaccinatio­ns provided by Changchun Changsheng Bio-tech Co.

Local authoritie­s will also provide new rabies vaccinatio­ns with products made by other companies, and offer follow-up and consultati­on services, the commission said in a circular released to all provincial health authoritie­s, and made public on Tuesday night.

The company, based in Changchun, Jilin province, is a major vaccine producer in China and has been entangled in public criticism since July 15, when the State Drug Administra­tion announced it found the company to be engaged in falsifying production and inspection records in the making of rabies vaccines.

Rabies is usually fatal if left untreated.

An investigat­ion team sent by the central government revealed on Monday that the company has been engaged in various serious violations since April 2014. They includ- ed adulterati­on of expired vaccines as well as tampering with production dates and batch codes so products could still be used after their expiration dates.

The company has been ordered to suspend production, and authoritie­s are recalling its rabies vaccines sold in China and overseas. Top officials have vowed harsh punishment for all responsibl­e, including officials who failed to fulfill their duties.

In the joint circular released by the health commission and the drug administra­tion on Tuesday night, health authoritie­s across China will provide remedial services to all people who have received vaccinatio­ns with rabies vaccines produced by the Changchun company.

Among this group, those who have not completed the entire series of injections can continue to receive qualified rabies vaccines produced by other companies for free, according to the circular.

Those who have completed the entire procedure can get rabies vaccinatio­ns again for free if they so choose, the circular said.

Rabies normally begins showing symptoms in humans between one to three months after infection, the commission said, citing figures from the World Health Organizati­on.

To ensure the health of those who have received the rabies vaccines made by the company within the past year, local authoritie­s will provide follow-up services for them including consultati­on.

Typically, an individual should receive five doses of a rabies vaccine for a complete procedure within 28 days to be afforded maximum protection, said Zheng Dongyi, a physician at First Hospital of Tsinghua University.

In a separate case, the government of Shangluo, Shaanxi province, apologized to the public on Tuesday for mismanagem­ent in vaccinatio­n services by three clinics in the city, which resulted in panic among some parents.

The city government started an investigat­ion following an online post on Friday that said some children were injected with expired vaccines in the city. The investigat­ion found that none of the vaccines specified in the post were expired. Instead, mistakes found in record keeping caused the confusion, according to the city government.

The city is investigat­ing those responsibl­e, he said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong