Waterloo Region Record

China to start vaccinatin­g children as young as three as cases spread

Expansion part of new COVID measures to help prevent small outbreaks

- HUIZHONG WU

TAIPEI, TAIWAN — Children as young as three will start receiving COVID-19 vaccines in China, where 76 per cent of the population has been fully vaccinated and authoritie­s are maintainin­g a zero-tolerance policy toward outbreaks.

China becomes one of the very few countries in the world to start vaccinatin­g children that young against the virus. Cuba, for one, has begun a vaccine drive for children as young as two. The U.S. and many European countries allow COVID-19 shots down to age 12, though the U.S. is moving quickly toward opening vaccinatio­ns to threeto 11-year-olds.

Local city and provincial level government­s in at least five Chinese provinces issued notices in recent days announcing that children ages three to 11 will be required to get their vaccinatio­ns.

The expansion of the vaccinatio­n campaign comes as parts of China take new clampdown measures to try to stamp out small outbreaks. Gansu, a northweste­rn province heavily dependent on tourism, closed all tourist sites Monday after finding new COVID-19 cases. Residents in parts of Inner Mongolia have been ordered to stay indoors because of an outbreak there.

The National Health Commission reported that 35 new cases of local transmissi­on had been detected over the past 24 hours, four of them in Gansu. An additional 19 cases were found in the Inner Mongolia region, with others scattered around the country.

China has employed lockdowns, quarantine­s and compulsory testing for the virus throughout the pandemic and has largely stamped out cases of local infection while fully vaccinatin­g 1.07 billion people out of a population of 1.4 billion.

In particular, the government is concerned about the spread of the more contagious Delta variant by travellers and about having a largely vaccinated public ahead of the Beijing Olympics in February. Overseas spectators already have been banned from the Winter Games, and participan­ts will have to stay in a bubble separating them from people outside.

China’s most widely used vaccines, from Sinopharm and Sinovac, have shown efficacy in preventing severe disease and transmissi­on of the virus, based on public data. But the protection they offer against the Delta variant has not been answered definitive­ly, although officials say they remain protective.

Hubei, Fujian and Hainan provinces all issued provincial level notices alerting new vaccinatio­n requiremen­ts, while individual cities in Zhejiang province and Hunan province have also issued similar announceme­nts.

China in June had approved two vaccines — Sinopharm’s from the Beijing Institute of Biological Products and Sinovac — for children ages three to 17, but it has only been vaccinatin­g those 12 and older.

In August, regulators approved another, Sinopharm’s from the Wuhan Institute of Biological Products.

After the vaccines received domestic approval for children in China, foreign government­s began giving the shots to children in their own countries. Cambodia uses both Sinovac and Sinopharm’s shots in children six to 11. Regulators in Chile approved Sinovac for children as young as six. In Argentina, regulators approved the Sinopharm vaccine for children as young as age six.

Many developing countries left out of the race to get shots from Western pharmaceut­ical companies like Pfizer and Moderna bought Chinese vaccines.China has shipped more than 1.2 billion doses as of September, according to its Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

 ?? FENG KAIHUA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Residents line up Saturday to get swabbed for a coronaviru­s test during mass testing in Xixia District of Yinchuan in northwest China’s Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region.
FENG KAIHUA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Residents line up Saturday to get swabbed for a coronaviru­s test during mass testing in Xixia District of Yinchuan in northwest China’s Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region.

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