The Star Malaysia

Vaccinatio­n drive kicks off

Renowned neurosurge­on is first Filipino to receive Sinovac jab

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THE country launched its Covid-19 vaccinatio­n drive, less than a day after the arrival of a batch of the Sinovac vaccine CoronaVac donated by China.

Philippine General Hospital (PGH) director Gerardo Legaspi, a renowned neurosurge­on, was the first Filipino to receive the CoronaVac vaccine.

Legaspi urged Filipinos, especially health workers, to get the Sinovac vaccine, saying it is safe.

“The decision to pick Sinovac is based on science, and it took Philippine experts six weeks to carefully study the vaccine,” he told a televised press conference.

Legaspi said he would recommend CoronaVac to those with allergies.

Simultaneo­us vaccinatio­ns took place in different hospitals in Metro Manila shortly after Legaspi got the shot.

“Today is a historic day here at the PGH and several other hospitals in Metro Manila because it is the start of new hope. After a year of darkness brought about by Covid19, finally, there is light,” presidenti­al spokespers­on Harry Roque said.

The Philippine­s’ Department of Health said the Sinovac vaccines “will also be rolled out in other parts of the country in the coming days”.

Among the officials who volunteere­d were testing czar Vince Dizon, Food and Drug Administra­tion director General Enrique Domingo, and Carlito Galvez, the officer in charge of vaccine procuremen­t.

“We were near tears when the (Chinese) vaccines arrived yesterday. At last, the doses of hope that we have been waiting for have arrived,” Galvez said at the kick-off ceremony.

The government aims to inoculate up to 70 million Filipinos this year to achieve herd immunity, starting with healthcare workers, the elderly, and the poor communitie­s.

The Philippine­s is negotiatin­g to buy over 160 million vaccine doses from different pharmaceut­ical firms this year, including Sinovac.

President Rodrigo Duterte received the vaccines from Sinovac Biotech Ltd that arrived in the Philippine­s on Sunday.

“The efficacy is good,” he said, urging Filipinos to get the Sinovac vaccine.

China’s Ambassador to the Philippine­s Huang Xilian handed over the vaccines to the Philippine government.

Duterte viewed the crates containing the vaccines, inspected an actual single-dose vaccine vial during the ceremonial turnover, and thanked the Chinese government.

“China has been giving us everything but never asked anything from us,” Duterte told reporters on Sunday.

He said China’s donations would greatly help the Philippine economy recover once the vaccine rollout begins. — Xinhua

 ?? — Reuters ?? Waiting for their turn: Military medical profession­als waiting for the inoculatio­n to start on the first day of the vaccinatio­n drive, at the Victoriano Luna Medical Center in Quezon City, Metro Manila.
— Reuters Waiting for their turn: Military medical profession­als waiting for the inoculatio­n to start on the first day of the vaccinatio­n drive, at the Victoriano Luna Medical Center in Quezon City, Metro Manila.

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