Times of Oman

Scandal over vaccine safety sparks anger on Chinese social media

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BEIJING: A scandal over faulty vaccines in China has sparked anger on social media, underscori­ng the difficulti­es regulators face in rebuilding trust after years of food and drug safety scares.

The incident is a major blow for Beijing’s efforts to push domestical­ly made vaccines and for China’s drug regulator, which has been struggling to clean up the world’s second-biggest drug industry.

Worried parents trying to ascertain if their children had been administer­ed faulty vaccines led to the topic becoming the second most watched at the weekend on the Weibo social media site, with details widely shared on the WeChat messaging app.

“If the state does not protect its citizens, how can we love our country?” asked one Weibo user, while another lamented, “Looking at the news, I don’t dare to have an injection.”

The scandal erupted a week ago, after major vaccine maker Changsheng Biotechnol­ogy Co was found to have violated standards in making rabies vaccine for humans. The regulator ordered it to halt production and recall all its vaccines, the company said in a statement.

On Thursday, however, it told the stock exchange that authoritie­s in its base in northeaste­rn Jilin province were fining it over substandar­d production, uncovered in 2017, of a DPT vaccine to combat diphtheria, pertussis and tetanus (DPT).

The defective vaccine might not confer immunity but would not affect human safety, provincial authoritie­s had said in November, implicatin­g another company, Wuhan Institute of Biological Products, in substandar­d DPT vaccines. Reuters’ calls to Changsheng’s headquarte­rs on Sunday went unanswered.

The Food and Drug Administra­tion said in a statement on Sunday evening that its investigat­ion had found that Changsheng fabricates production records and product inspection records, and arbitraril­y changes process parameters and equipment, “serious violations” of the law.

It said the agency was investigat­ing the company and suspected crimes would be handled by the public security department, adding that all vaccine producers would be inspected and any violations would be dealt with seriously.

In a stock exchange statement on Sunday, the company said its suspension of rabies vaccine production would have a significan­t impact on its finances and that some regional disease control agencies had suspended some of its other vaccines.

The latest problems come a little more than two years after police in northern Shandong province said they had uncovered the illegal sale of vaccines worth nearly $90 million.

Full story @ timesofoma­n.com/world

 ?? Damir Sagolj/File Photo — REUTERS/ ?? CONTROVERS­Y: A nurse prepares a vaccine to be given to a child in a hospital in Beijing, China, April 13, 2016.
Damir Sagolj/File Photo — REUTERS/ CONTROVERS­Y: A nurse prepares a vaccine to be given to a child in a hospital in Beijing, China, April 13, 2016.

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