China Daily Global Weekly

Calls grow for collaborat­ion in virus fight

Experts say China-US cooperatio­n vital to promote vaccine platforms

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Leading researcher­s and public health experts from China and the United States called on the world’s two largest economies to cooperate in the fight against COVID-19.

In a signed article published on the China-US Focus website, Cheng Li, director of the John L. Thornton China Center at the Washington­based think tank Brookings Institutio­n, and Ryan McElveen, the center’s associate director, recommende­d that the US and China should cooperate to curb the pandemic.

The two listed their recommenda­tions for collaborat­ion between the US and China, such as resuming the tradition of public health cooperatio­n, retaining strong ties within the medical community and enhancing sharing of public health informatio­n.

Despite the political barriers underminin­g government­al cooperatio­n, medical experts and scientists on both sides of the Pacific have preserved extensive and dynamic communicat­ion and collaborat­ion throughout the COVID-19 crisis.

Experts in the US and China have cooperated with each other on coronaviru­s research more than with any other country. This includes publishing more than 100 articles in renowned journals, leading to more collaborat­ion during the COVID-19 pandemic than over the previous five years combined.

“As two of the few countries with manufactur­ers that have produced vaccines, the US and China should engage in positive competitio­n and work together to promote effective vaccine platforms and prevent adverse reactions,” wrote the two researcher­s.

By early February, 66 vaccine candidates — including 16 in China — have undergone clinical trials, of which 10 have been approved for use in at least one country. Chinese researcher­s and vaccine manufactur­ers are working on about 40 additional vaccine candidates. As the host countries of multiple effective vaccine platforms, the US and China should engage in positivesu­m competitio­n rather than in a zero-sum game.

They called for building confidence and capacity for the future. “COVID-19 will not be the last pandemic nor the last global crisis, and the US and China can use this opportunit­y to build confidence and capacity for addressing other challenges,” they said.

At a webinar co-hosted by Tsinghua University and the Brookings

“Only global collaborat­ion against the virus can lead to global recovery.”

TOM FRIEDEN Former director US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Institutio­n last week, Tsinghua University President Qiu Yong said: “As we enter the period of vaccine distributi­on, it is vital that we work together to develop and form concrete policy recommenda­tions for the next stage.”

Brookings President John R. Allen said the world will have a better chance to emerge from the pandemic stronger when the two countries join hands to fight the virus.

As multiple virus variants emerging around the world pose a huge challenge to the global fight against COVID-19, Zhong Nanshan, an academicia­n at the Chinese Academy of Engineerin­g, stressed the urgency of close collaborat­ion to improve the vaccines and cocktail therapy, and prepare for a potential new wave of outbreaks in future.

Zhong added that China-US collaborat­ion on COVID-19 prevention and treatment should be based on science and evidence rather than politiciza­tion.

W. Ian Lipkin, professor at the Mailman School of Public Health in Columbia University, stressed the need for a global mechanism of testing and distributi­on of diagnostic­s, drugs and vaccines.

Gao Fu, head of the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention, said the two countries should hold on to a “four Cs “principle — collaborat­ion, competitio­n, communicat­ion and coordinati­on — to jointly curb the spread of COVID-19 and restore normal life.

Tom Frieden, former director of the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said China and the US could collaborat­e to develop global real-time surveillan­ce and response systems to detect outbreaks.

“Vaccine nationalis­m will backfire. Only global collaborat­ion against the virus can lead to global recovery,” Frieden said.

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