Imperial Valley Press

China rapidly expands use of experiment­al COVID-19 vaccines

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TAIPEI, Taiwan (AP) — China is rapidly increasing the number of people receiving its experiment­al coronaviru­s vaccines, with a city offering one to the general public and a biotech company providing another free to students going abroad.

The city of Jiaxing, south of Shanghai, is offering a vaccine under developmen­t by Sinovac, it said in an announceme­nt Thursday. It said high-risk groups, including people who are “responsibl­e for the basic operations of the city” will receive priority, but that residents who have emergency needs can also sign up.

The vaccine is in the final stage of clinical testing, but has not yet been approved. The city government said it is being provided under an emergency authorizat­ion.

China National Biotech Group, another Chinese vaccine company, is offering its vaccine free to students who study abroad in a strategy health experts say raises safety and ethical concerns.

More than 168,000 people signed up to receive the vaccine via an online survey and more than 91,000 are being considered, CNBG said on its website. That page had been removed by Tuesday.

Chinese drug companies have five vaccines in final stages of testing but none is approved for public use.

They are part of a global race to develop a vaccine that, if successful, offers the fledgling Chinese industry the potential for prestige and worldwide sales.

Top Chinese health officials have promised a vaccine for the general public before the end of this year.

CNBG’s vaccine has already been given to medical workers and employees of Chinese companies being sent abroad under an emergency authorizat­ion for people in high-risk categories. It has given the vaccine to 350,000 people outside its clinical trials, a company executive said in September. The trials have about 40,000 people enrolled.

“Currently, it seems

Chinese students going abroad have a strong desire to take the vaccine,” a CNBG employee was quoted as saying by a stateowned newspaper, the Paper, based on the survey results in September.

Students in China who are due to start their semesters abroad say they want the vaccine because they are worried about getting sick.

“It’s very dangerous over there, the town we study in, it’s a red danger zone,” said a student who goes to school in Poland and gave only her surname, Ouyang. She signed up for the CNBG vaccine in September but hasn’t heard back yet. “We all really want this vaccine.”

A student who is due to go to Britain said she signed up via the online link after classmates said they received the vaccine.

The student, who would give only her English name, Sally, said she started to hear in September that the vaccine was available to people such as her. She said other students said she might need to travel to Beijing, the national capital, or Wuhan, where the outbreak emerged in December, to receive the vaccine.

If the vaccine works, it might help protect students going to Europe or the United States, where the pandemic is still raging, medical experts said. But they said developers need to make clear it is unproven and keep track of what happens to people who receive it.

If the vaccine doesn’t work, then “this is giving people a false sense of security,” said Sridhar Venkatapur­am, a specialist in bioethics at King’s College London’s Global Health Institute.

The ruling Communist Party declared the coronaviru­s under control in March but has warned that the risk of a new outbreak is high. Travelers and visitors to public buildings still are checked for signs of infection. Those arriving from abroad are required to be quarantine­d for two weeks. The country has reported 4,634 deaths and 85,622 confirmed cases.

 ?? AP PHOTO/NG HAN GUAN ?? In this Sept. 24 file photo, an employee of Sinovac works in a lab at a factory producing its SARSCoV-2 vaccine for COVID-19 named CoronaVac in Beijing. China is rapidly increasing the number of people receiving its experiment­al coronaviru­s vaccines, with a city offering one to the general public and a biotech company providing another free to students going abroad.
AP PHOTO/NG HAN GUAN In this Sept. 24 file photo, an employee of Sinovac works in a lab at a factory producing its SARSCoV-2 vaccine for COVID-19 named CoronaVac in Beijing. China is rapidly increasing the number of people receiving its experiment­al coronaviru­s vaccines, with a city offering one to the general public and a biotech company providing another free to students going abroad.

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