China Daily

New rule enables Shanghai expats to get vaccinated

- By ZHOU WENTING in Shanghai zhouwentin­g@chinadaily.com.cn

Shanghai, the eastern metropolis with the largest expatriate community on the Chinese mainland, announced that it will soon include foreign residents in its voluntary COVID-19 vaccinatio­n program.

Starting on March 29, appropriat­ely aged expatriate­s will be able to apply for vaccinatio­ns, the city authoritie­s said.

This measure, announced late on Tuesday, made Shanghai the second city in China to publicize COVID-19 vaccinatio­n plans for foreigners amid the country’s efforts to popularize inoculatio­ns among its residents.

Expat residents aged between 18 and 59 in Wuhan, Hubei province, have been able to apply for inoculatio­ns starting this month.

Workers at some Shanghai residentia­l communitie­s with a large proportion of foreign residents said on Wednesday they received inquiries from expat residents about how to reserve the inoculatio­ns.

“In response to their concerns, we’ll translate the municipal government’s official release with detailed steps on how to book the vaccinatio­n appointmen­t and what materials to provide. We plan to publish a bilingual article about this soon on the neighborho­od’s WeChat account,” said Tang Jia, a neighborho­od official at Yanlord Garden in Pudong district’s Lujiazui financial area.

“We’ll also share the article in our WeChat group of 270 members who are expats or have expat family members,” she said.

Another neighborho­od official, surnamed Zhao, said the district is considerin­g opening its fourth COVID-19 vaccine inoculatio­n center at Lujiazui to provide convenienc­e to both local and foreign residents.

Expats who are covered by the country’s medical insurance will be entitled to the same treatment as insured Chinese citizens, while those who are not will pay 100 yuan ($15) per dose.

Giuseppe Bigatti, a doctor from Italy and currently director of the hysterosco­py center of Renji Hospital in Shanghai, said that he completed his two-dose inoculatio­n in February when hospital workers were prioritize­d to get vaccinated voluntaril­y, and he would like his wife, a schoolteac­her from Italy, to get vaccinated soon.

“I believe this is the only solution in order to travel again when internatio­nal travel can resume,” he said.

Abdurasulo­v Safar from Uzbekistan, a graduate student at Shanghai Internatio­nal Studies University, welcomed the decision to include expats in the vaccinatio­n program, and said he would make an appointmen­t soon.

Safar said that he would feel much safer returning to his home country, where the epidemic still lingers, after graduation this summer if he got vaccinated. “The news came at the right time for me and I had a very sound sleep after seeing the informatio­n,” he said.

“I trust China’s technology and the safety and efficacy of the vaccine. After getting vaccinated, I’ll promote the Chinese vaccine among people in my home country,” said Safar.

Uzbekistan certified a COVID-19 vaccine produced by a Chinese company in early March. The vaccine is produced by Anhui Zhifei Longcom Biopharmac­eutical Co.

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Giuseppe Bigatti, a doctor from Italy and director of the hysterosco­py center of Renji Hospital in Shanghai, receives the first dose of a COVID-19 vaccine in the city in January. He was vaccinated with the second dose in February.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Giuseppe Bigatti, a doctor from Italy and director of the hysterosco­py center of Renji Hospital in Shanghai, receives the first dose of a COVID-19 vaccine in the city in January. He was vaccinated with the second dose in February.

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