Global Times

China passes 1b shots mark; eyes herd immunity by Dec

▶ Staggering number backed by boost in production and roll- out: expert

- By GT staff reporters

China on Sunday became the first country in the world to have administer­ed one billion doses of COVID- 19 vaccines. Such achievemen­t is believed to be a “milestone” but not “surprising” given China’s thorough vaccinatio­n plan and effective implementa­tion system.

China has administer­ed more than 1.01 billion doses as of Saturday, according to data released by the National Health Commission on Sunday. The number is about three times that delivered in the US, and almost 40 percent of the 2.5 billion shots given globally, according to data website Our World in Data.

China kicked off its national vaccinatio­n drive in December, 2020. Despite a slow start due to the low willingnes­s among the public to receive the vaccine, given how well the epidemic had been brought under control, the country has witnessed a surge in daily delivered doses since May – more than 10 million per day and sometimes even double that number – following unexpected

continuous outbreaks in Northeast China’s Liaoning, East China’s Anhui and South China’s Guangdong provinces.

The continuous boost in vaccine production and speedy vaccinatio­n roll- out in China reflects the government’s quick response in both vaccine research and its mass inoculatio­n plan against the outbreak, and is also a result of China’s highly efficient governance system, said the experts.

“The milestone represents China not only comes closer to full domestic immune protection, but also makes a great contributi­on to the global fight against the epidemic,” Feng Duojia, president of the China Vaccine Industry Associatio­n, told the Global Times. “China’s actual supply of vaccines significan­tly exceeds domestic use, and China continues to offer doses overseas.”

Registrati­on for vaccinatio­n will actively continue, given the public’s confidence in the government and Chinese vaccines, Feng noted. “Ensuring a vaccinatio­n rate of more than 80 percent is no longer a problem. What needs to be solved now is how to ensure an ideal immunity effect after full public vaccinatio­n.”

In the next step, China should also enhance investment in vaccine research and developmen­t to improve the products as well as explore the best vaccinatio­n procedure to maximize efficacy, a Beijing- based immunologi­st told the Global Times on condition of anonymity. To improve the vaccines so that they can handle virus mutations as well as make them safe for the elderly will be the focus in the next step, the expert said.

China surpassed threshold of administer­ing 100 million doses of the vaccine on March 27, and the pace of vaccinatio­n has been accelerati­ng since then, setting records again later. On May 28, the number of vaccinatio­ns in China exceeded 600 million doses, just five days after it achieved 500 million.

The high speed has been maintained ever since, moving from 900 million doses on June 14 to reaching 1 billion on June 19, a space of just five days.

If each person received two doses, the rough vaccinatio­n rate in China would be around 36 percent currently. If the current rate continues, there is little doubt that vaccinatio­n rate will reach 40 percent by the end of June, a target set up at the beginning of the year.

Chen Xi, an assistant professor of public health at Yale University, said that China’s administra­tion of 1 billion vaccine doses is an important milestone, but he is not surprised that the number has been achieved so quickly, as it fits in well with China’s initial goals.

For a country of 1.4 billion people, getting 1 billion doses of vaccine is just the first step in building herd immunity, according to Feng. China is expected to have 70 percent of the target population fully vaccinated by the end of this year and form herd immunity, Feng said.

Chinese vaccines have been gradually rolled out to people aged 3- 17 years, and a wider demographi­c and rising inoculatio­n rate in the national immunologi­cal spectrum is expected.

Globally, Chinese vaccines are also being approved and used by increasing­ly more government­s. For example, Singapore started to offer Chinese produced Sinovac Biotech COVID- 19 vaccines to the public for the first time since Friday.

Challenges in the next step

Despite taking the absolute leading position in total number of doses administer­ed, China lags behind some other countries in the number of vaccine doses administer­ed per 100 people.

According to Our World in Data, as of Friday, the number was 68.8 doses per 100 people in China, ranking the seventh highest globally. It is about half of the world’s highest 144.57 doses per 100 people in the United Arab Emirates.

As of the same day, the vaccinatio­n rate is 94.5 doses per 100 people in the US.

But experts said that China would soon catch up given the country’s current vaccinatio­n speed. According to Our World in Data, China has the second highest number of daily doses administer­ed per 100 people – 1.26 doses – following South Korea’s 1.37 doses on June 17.

Chen expected that the inoculatio­n speed in China may experience a slowdown as it works toward the 80 percent vaccinatio­n rate target from the current 40 percent, as is the case in many other countries. But the slowing speed in China will be lower than in other countries, as the risk from neighborin­g countries and imported infections reinforces people’s urgency to get vaccinated. Also, the autumn and winter seasons may see an upswing in sporadic infections.

Chen believes the next step should focus on bridging the gaps between regions and population­s, ensuring the coverage rate of the elderly, patients with underlying diseases and other vulnerable groups, and prepare for a gradual reopening of the border to the world in the future.

 ?? Photo: cnsphoto ?? A nurse in Hohhot, Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region injects a women with COVID- 19 vaccine. China has administer­ed more than 1.01 billion doses as of Saturday, according to data released by the National Health Commission on Sunday.
Photo: cnsphoto A nurse in Hohhot, Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region injects a women with COVID- 19 vaccine. China has administer­ed more than 1.01 billion doses as of Saturday, according to data released by the National Health Commission on Sunday.

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