Oman Daily Observer

China widens vaccine scandal probe, vows tough penalties

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SHANGHAI: China’s drug watchdog published details on Tuesday of an investigat­ion into a second firm found to have made inferior vaccines, after cabinet vowed tough penalties and fines over a vaccine safety scandal that has sparked widespread anger.

Public confidence in domesticma­de drugs and medical products has been shaken by such scandals in recent weeks and the prices of healthcare shares in China have dropped.

China has already ordered the arrest of 18 people at Changsheng Biotechnol­ogy Co Ltd, the vaccine maker at the heart of the scandal, including its chairwoman Gao Junfang.

The firm was found to have falsified data and sold ineffectiv­e vaccines. It also fabricated production and inspection records relating to a rabies vaccine used for infants. Changsheng has apologised publicly for the incidents.

A meeting of the State Council chaired by Premier Li Keqiang on Monday said enterprise­s and individual­s should be severely punished and banned from the pharmaceut­ical industry for life.

It ordered further investigat­ions to determine the criminal responsibi­lity of other serious offenders involved in the Changsheng case, according to a notice posted late on Monday.

The State Council also called for a full investigat­ion into any potential regulatory failings, including possible derelictio­n of duty by officials, and said a long-term mechanism should be establishe­d to ensure public safety.

A special cabinet investigat­ion team said on Friday Changsheng had systematic­ally falsified production and testing records to avoid regulatory scrutiny, and had also sold 252,600 doses of ineffectiv­e DPT vaccines to inoculate children against diphtheria, whooping cough and tetanus.

The China Food and Drug Administra­tion also published details on Tuesday of its investigat­ion into Wuhan Institute of Biological Products which, with Changsheng, was found to be producing inferior vaccines in November 2017.

The regulator said on its website the cause of Wuhan’s substandar­d vaccines was accidental because its packaging equipment had experience­d a temporary malfunctio­n that caused ingredient­s in the vaccine to be unevenly distribute­d.

The company recalled and destroyed all 400,520 inferior vaccine doses on May 4 and was also fined an unspecifie­d amount, the regulator said.

It said Wuhan was considered to have fixed its production issues after passing inspection­s in March.

The company did not respond immediatel­y to requests for comment.

Fitch Ratings said in a report on Tuesday such scandals highlighte­d the risks facing China’s pharmaceut­ical companies, which focus primarily on the bulk production of a small number of products, making them vulnerable to safety incidents.

“Concentrat­ion on low-quality generic drugs, high product concentrat­ion and heightened regulatory risks will continue to constrain most Chinese drug makers’ business profiles to non-investment grade levels,” it said.

Public confidence in domestic-made drugs and medical products has been shaken by such scandals in recent weeks and the prices of healthcare shares in China have dropped

 ?? — Reuters ?? Worker takes vaccine vials to inspect at the workshop of vaccine maker Wuhan Institute of Biological Products in Wuhan, Hubei province, China.
— Reuters Worker takes vaccine vials to inspect at the workshop of vaccine maker Wuhan Institute of Biological Products in Wuhan, Hubei province, China.

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