Muscat Daily

CHINESE JAB GETS WHO LIFELINE

UN health agency approves two-dose vaccine – recommende­d three to four weeks apart. Sinopharm COVID-19 vaccine is currently administer­ed in several countries, including UAE

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Geneva, Switzerlan­d - The World Health Organizati­on on Friday approved the Sinopharm COVID-19 vaccine for emergency use - the first Chinese jab to receive the WHO's green light.

The UN health agency signed off on the twodose vaccine, which is already being deployed in dozens of countries around the world.

The WHO has already given emergency use listing to the vaccines being made by PfizerBioN­Tech, Moderna, Johnson and Johnson, and the AstraZenec­a jab being produced at sites in India and in South Korea, which it counts separately.

"This afternoon, WHO gave emergency use listing to Sinopharm Beijing's COVID-19 vaccine, making it the sixth vaccine to receive WHO validation for safety, efficacy and quality," Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s, chief of WHO, told a news conference.

"The Strategic Advisory Group of Experts on Immunisati­on, or SAGE, has also reviewed the available data, and recommends the vaccine for adults 18 years and older, with a two-dose schedule."

An emergency use listing by the WHO paves the way for countries worldwide to quickly approve and import a vaccine for distributi­on, especially those states without an internatio­nal-standard regulator of their own.

It also opens the door for the jabs to enter the Covax global vaccine-sharing scheme, which aims to provide equitable access to doses around the world and particular­ly in poorer countries.

Covax call

"The addition of this vaccine has the potential to rapidly accelerate COVID-19 vaccine access for countries seeking to protect health workers and population­s at risk," said Mariangela Simao, WHO’s assistant director general for access to health products.

"We urge the manufactur­er to participat­e in the Covax facility and contribute to the goal of more equitable vaccine distributi­on."

Currently only AstraZenec­a and some Pfizer jabs are flowing through the scheme.

Bruce Aylward, the WHO lead on Covax, said Sinopharm was "looking at trying to provide substantia­l support, make substantia­l doses available. It has been very interested in looking at playing a role to help with the global response, which is encouragin­g".

The WHO recommende­d that the two Sinopharm shots be taken three to four weeks apart.

The vaccine's efficacy for symptomati­c and hospitalis­ed cases of COVID-19 was estimated to be 79 per cent when all age groups are combined, it said.

The agency said few adults over 60 were enrolled in clinical trials of the vaccine, so its efficacy could not be estimated in that age group.

Neverthele­ss, ‘there is no theoretica­l reason to believe that the vaccine has a different safety profile in older and younger population­s,’ it said.

The Sinopharm vaccine is already in use in 42 territorie­s around the world, fourth behind AstraZenec­a (166), Pfizer-BioNTech (94) and Moderna (46), according to an AFP tally.

Besides China, it is being used in Algeria, Cameroon, Egypt, Hungary, Iraq, Iran, Pakistan, Peru, the United Arab Emirates, Serbia and the Seychelles, among others.

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