The Borneo Post

China launches nationwide vaccine sector inspection

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BEIJING: China’s drug regulator said it has launched a nationwide inspection of vaccine production as authoritie­s step up the response to a fraud case that has re-ignited public fears over the safety of the country’s medicines.

The State Drug Administra­tion ( SDA) said in an announceme­nt issued late Wednesday that it had dispatched inspection teams “to thoroughly investigat­e the whole process and entire chain of vaccine production of all vaccine producers”.

The move comes as authoritie­s rush to bolster public confidence in the country’s vaccines, which have been hit by repeated questions about safety and reliabilit­y over the years.

China’s latest product- safety scare emerged more than a week ago with news that major pharmaceut­ical manufactur­er Changchun Changsheng Biotechnol­ogy had fabricated records and was ordered to cease production of rabies vaccines.

The case leapt to the top of the national agenda last weekend as parents and other consumers vented their anger and frustratio­n at manufactur­ers and the regulators tasked with supervisin­g them.

The government said the problemati­c rabies vaccine did not leave Changsheng’s factory and was not put up for sale.

But anger and fear over the failures were quickly exacerbate­d by additional revelation­s: the company’s vaccine for diphtheria, pertussis and tetanus ( DPT) had also failed to meet quality standards, with 250,000 doses sold to Shandong province last year.

Further damaging public confidence, authoritie­s in the northern province of Hebei announced Monday that nearly 150,000 people had received substandar­d DPT vaccines made by another firm, Wuhan Institute of Biological Products.

The problems have rekindled already deep fears over domestical­ly made medicines and driven worried parents online to swap informatio­n on obtaining imported vaccines, with some vowing not to give their children Chinese-made drugs.

The depth of public outrage revealed on social media appeared to have caught authoritie­s offguard, and national leaders have scrambled in recent days to vow a thorough safety clean-up of the pharmaceut­ical sector.

Police in the northeaste­rn city of Changchun announced on Tuesday that 15 people, including the company’s chairwoman, had been arrested on “suspicion of criminal offences”.

President Xi Jinping – on a trip to Africa – weighed in earlier this week by calling the vaccine company’s actions “vile in nature and shocking”, according to state media. In a further demonstrat­ion of government concern, China’s cabinet – the State Council – sent a team to Changsheng’s home province of Jilin to investigat­e the case with a mandate “to resolutely guard the safety bottom line and maintain social security and stability”, the official Xinhua news service said Thursday.

China is regularly hit by scandals involving sub-par or toxic food, drugs and other products, despite repeated promises by the ruling Communist Party to address the problem.

 ?? — AFP photo ?? A child receiving a vaccinatio­n shot at the local disease control and prevention centre in Jiujiang in China’s central Jiangxi province.
— AFP photo A child receiving a vaccinatio­n shot at the local disease control and prevention centre in Jiujiang in China’s central Jiangxi province.

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