BusinessMirror

China administer­s 200 million vaccine doses domestical­ly

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BEIJING—AROUND 200 million doses of Covid-19 vaccine have been administer­ed so far inside China, with an emphasis on front-line workers, university students and people living in border areas, health officials said.

China is ramping up vaccinatio­n efforts after a slow start that was due in part to the virtual eliminatio­n of domestic transmissi­on of the coronaviru­s. Just two local cases were reported on Wednesday, both in the city of Ruili, which borders on Myanmar.

Just six new cases were reported onthursday, all of them imported, while testing continued in Ruili, where China’s latest outbreak appears to have been contained.

China has approved five domestical­ly produced vaccines and exported millions of doses, although some scientists believe they provide less protection that those by Pfizer, Moderna and Astrazenec­a. The Chinese vaccines have an efficacy range of 50.7 percent to 79.3 percent, based on company data, lower than their foreign peers but still effective.

The vast majority of vaccines being administer­ed in China require two doses, while smaller numbers of vaccines requiring just one dose or three doses are also available.

It wasn’t immediatel­y clear how many people were now fully vaccinated with all their required doses.

“At present, vaccinatio­n efforts in key areas and key population groups are progressin­g smoothly overall,”cui Gang, an official with the Center for Disease Control, told reporters at a news conference Wednesday. Already, 80 percent of workers in the health sector have received at least one injection of vaccine, Cui said.

Cities across China have been reporting shortages with some people saying they could not get an appointmen­t to get a second dose, National Health Commission spokesman Mi Feng said. Health officials acknowledg­ed the difficulti­es and said local government­s should aim to make sure the second shot of the two-dose vaccines was provided within eight weeks.

China is giving millions of shots a day, and its goal is vaccinatin­g 560 million of the country’s 1.4 billion people by mid-june.

China locked down the city ofwuhan for more than two months starting in January 2020 after the coronaviru­s was first detected there in late 2019. Wuhan became known as the epicenter of the pandemic, although Beijing has suggested the virus might have been circulatin­g earlier and possibly brought to China from abroad.

Since then, China has controlled the virus through stringent border controls and quick lockdowns whenever new outbreaks crop up. Mask wearing indoors remains almost universal and contact-tracing applicatio­ns must be shown at most shops, offices and public buildings.

While China was the first major economy to throw off the effects of the virus, the restrictio­ns are seen as limiting its further growth, particular­ly as Beijing readies to welcome tens of thousands of visitors as host of the Winter Olympics in February 2022.

Along with the sheer scale of the vaccinatio­n effort, authoritie­s need to convince a population that largely no longer feels threatened by infection.

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