Global Times

NHC urges halt to compulsory vaccinatio­n

▶ Rare cases show management problems; voluntary inoculatio­n stressed

- By Chen Qingqing, Cao Siqi and Leng Shumei

China’s top health authoritie­s on Sunday urged local authoritie­s to halt mandatory vaccinatio­n orders as some cities were reportedly found to adopt compulsory measures to meet the country’s goal of vaccinatin­g 560 million people by June.

Officials and experts said the instances were rare and do not reflect the big picture, but it reveals management problems in some local government­s that need to be alert. They stressed that the country’s principle is to encourage those in need to get vaccinated while respecting their wishes.

China is taking an approach of “getting the people who need it vaccinated and pushing forward vaccinatio­n in stages,” and as of Saturday, the country had administer­ed 164.47 million jabs, making it the secondfast­est country in the world in terms of mass vaccinatio­n, according to the press conference.

However, National Health Commission ( NHC) spokespers­on Mi Feng noted that “Some places adopted inappropri­ate measures, including a ‘ one- size- fits- all’ or ‘ compulsory for all’ approach, which needs to be corrected.”

In the latest case, officials from the township of Wancheng in South China’s Hainan Province revoked a controvers­ial COVID- 19 vaccine inoculatio­n notice which claimed that people who are not vaccinated would be banned from public transport and entering public venues such as restaurant­s and supermarke­ts. “We sincerely apologize for the improper way that we mobilized vaccinatio­n,” reads a statement released by the local government.

However, some foreign media reports exaggerate­d these rare cases and attempted to smear China’s incentives to promote vaccinatio­n by interpreti­ng it as “a campaign prompting a backlash among residents,” and that some are “being forced” to receive vaccinatio­ns.

Interviews with people who did not get vaccinated conducted by the Global Times showed they did not get a shot either because they are not eligible due to age or health criteria, or they believe the virus is far away from them and there is no need to be vaccinated as China is safe enough.

According to estimates from disease control experts, vaccinatio­n coverage would need to reach 70 to 80 percent of a population for herd immunity, which in China means about 900 million to 1 billion people would need to be vaccinated.

Citing a report on the results of a study recently released by the University of Chile, AFP reported that CoronaVac is 56.5 percent effective in protecting recipients two weeks after the second dose, and 27.7 percent effective within the first two weeks. But for a single dose, efficacy in the 28 days between the first and second dose was only three percent.

The report cited by many foreign media as proof that Chinese company Sinovac Biotech’s COVID- 19 vaccine does not provide enough protection. However, the Global Times learned from a source close to the matter that it cannot represent the vaccine’s real efficacy in Chile, as it is based on limited open data and is “not even close to being a research paper.”

Liu Peicheng, director of Sinovac Biotech’s public relations department, said that Phase III clinical trials in Brazil, Indonesia, Turkey and Chile showed that the number of COVID- 19 cases is far smaller in the vaccinatio­n groups than in the placebo groups.

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