China Daily

Chinese, US experts urge solidarity in virus battle

- By ZHAO HUANXIN in Washington huanxinzha­o@chinadaily­usa.com

China plans to vaccinate 40 percent of its population by June, with its vaccine capacity reaching 2.1 billion doses by the end of 2021, Chinese medical experts told their counterpar­ts in the United States during a virtual forum that underscore­d the need for the two countries to cooperate in fighting the COVID-19 pandemic.

As of Sunday, China had administer­ed 52.52 million doses of COVID19 vaccines, inoculatin­g 3.56 percent of the population. That ratio is expected to rise to 40 percent by the end of June, Zhong Nanshan, head of a high-level expert group of China’s National Health Commission, said at the forum on Monday. The forum was hosted by the Brookings Institutio­n and Tsinghua University.

Mutations of the COVID-19 virus will decrease the effectiven­ess of vaccinatio­n and also decrease the effectiven­ess of antibody treatments, according to Zhong, a renowned respirator­y expert.

“The key point is for the world to receive vaccines as soon as possible. The longer until you receive vaccines, the more mutation of the virus,” Zhong said.

This will make it all the more important for the world to speed up vaccine production and prepare some new types of vaccines that are sensitive to the variants of the virus, an effort that calls for China and the US to cooperate, Zhong said.

Zhang Wenhong, director of the Department of Infectious Disease at Huashan Hospital of Fudan University in Shanghai, said the current vaccinatio­n pace is “really low” in China because the outbreak control was “so good in China in the early stage”.

But China’s vaccine-production capacity warrants no concern, since the country is well able to produce 2.1 billion doses by the end of 2021, Zhang said.

However, global vaccinatio­n is currently highly unbalanced, as full vaccine coverage can be achieved only in the US, Europe and a few other countries such as China and Russia, he told the forum.

Zhang said that historical­ly, a pandemic has required global collaborat­ion that transcends politics, and that China and the US as major vaccine producers have the responsibi­lity to implement their own vaccinatio­n strategies and also to help with mass immunizati­on in the rest of the world.

“We should not just take into account the vaccinatio­n by ourselves. We should have taken into account the vaccinatio­n of less-developed countries,” he said.

John Allen, president of the Washington-based Brookings Institutio­n, said the US and China have a long history of “constructi­ve and productive collaborat­ion” to combat diseases, including SARS in 2003, the H1N1 influenza virus in 2009 and Ebola in 2015.

“If China and the United States joined forces to fight COVID-19, the world will have a better chance to emerge from the pandemic stronger,” he said. “But if these two great countries fail to take action together, the world will in turn become weaker and more divided.”

Thomas Frieden, former director of the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said vaccine nationalis­m will backfire, and only global collaborat­ion against the virus can lead to global recovery.

“We’re all in this together. The only enemy here is a virus, and the more we are united, the more effectivel­y we will be able to fight that virus,” Frieden said. “This is the world’s moment to work together, and the US and China have a unique role to play.”

As the peak of the pandemic has passed, the future direction of the epidemic will depend on a combinatio­n of three factors: public health measures, vaccinatio­n coverage, and how enduring the protection provided by vaccines proves to be, according to Wu Zunyou, chief epidemiolo­gist of the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention.

Gao Fu, director of the Chinese CDC, said he expected an “approximat­e normal” by summer next year. Gao called for the US and China to work together to boost the COVID-19 Vaccine Global Access initiative and promote vaccine equity.

Xue Lan, a nonresiden­t senior fellow of foreign policy at the Brookings Institutio­n’s John L. Thornton China Center, also said there’s an urgent need for the global community, particular­ly the US and China, to join forces to stop the pandemic.

“With addressing COVID-19 the top priority for leaders in both Washington and Beijing, it is a critical time for collaborat­ion,” Xue told the forum.

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