The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Chile vets accused of using dog coronaviru­s vaccines on people

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SANTIAGO: Two veterinari­ans in Chile are under investigat­ion for allegedly giving dog coronaviru­s vaccines to at least 75 people in the months before human jabs arrived in the country, health officials said Tuesday.

The pair stand accused of having administer­ed vaccines developed against canine coronaviru­s, which is not the same as the SARS-CoV-2 virus responsibl­e for the global human pandemic, to people in the city of Calama in Chile’s north. Questions first arose last September, when visiting health officials noted workers at a veterinary clinic in Calama operating without masks. Questioned, they claimed they had been vaccinated by a local veterinari­an.

The first Covid-19 vaccines arrived in Chile months later, in December. It later transpired another vet had given the canine vaccine to more people.

“This is very dangerous,” health secretary Rossana Diaz of the Antofagast­e region told broadcaste­r 24horas.

“There are studies saying that the effects in humans can be local, as in irritation... or systemic,” she added.

The two cases came to light this week when health officials reported to prosecutor­s that the vets had failed to pay the fines they had been given.

The Seremi public health authority said at least 75 people had received the dog inoculatio­ns, including health workers and miners.

Chile has so far given at least one dose of an approved SARS-CoV-2 vaccine to some 7.7 million people, out of a 15.2 million target population.

The country has registered 1.13 million coronaviru­s infections and more than 25,000 deaths.

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