Philippine Daily Inquirer

TEST SINOVAC JAB, PGH DOCTORS INSIST

- STORY BY MARIEJO S. RAMOS AND JULIE M. AURELIO

Physicians at Philippine General Hospital, one of the main battlegrou­nds in the fight against the coronaviru­s, say the Sinovac vaccine must first pass appraisal before it is administer­ed to health-care workers. Health officials say the vaccine is safe. A donation of 600,000 shots of the vaccine from China will kick off the country’s inoculatio­n program.

An associatio­n of doctors at the Philippine General Hospital (PGH) insisted on Saturday that a China-made vaccine must first undergo an appraisal before it is administer­ed to health-care workers at the state-owned hospital, noting that it met sweeping disapprova­l from its residents and fellows.

In a statement, the PGH Physicians’ Associatio­n said “it came as a surprise” to the hospital community that the vaccine that would be administer­ed to its staff was the one developed by the Chinese company Sinovac Biotech, which the Food and Drug Administra­tion (FDA) did not recommend for health-care workers exposed to COVID-19.

The FDA noted that Sinovac’s vaccine, CoronaVac, had only a 50.4-percent efficacy rate for health workers dealing with the coronaviru­s in tests in Brazil.

The physicians said the vaccine must be evaluated by the Health Technology Assessment Council (HTAC), which they expected to “formulate recommenda­tions with judicious haste.”

“As the national university hospital, PGH should set an example on how vaccinatio­n rollout should be executed in the country,” the group said in a statement. “PGH should uphold the ideals of ethical and evidence-based medicine, [of] which it has been a bastion.”

More prudence

The doctors’ group issued the statement on the eve of the scheduled arrival of 600,000 doses of the Sinovac vaccine donated by the Chinese government.

It would be the first COVID-19 vaccine to legally enter the Philippine­s. A vaccine produced by the Chinese stateowned China National Pharmaceut­ical Group Co. Ltd., popularly known as Sinopharm, was smuggled into the country as early as September last year.

The physicians called on the PGH community to demand a “safe and efficaciou­s COVID-19 vaccine for all.”

“We recognize the efforts of the PGH administra­tion in hastening the vaccinatio­n process for its constituen­ts. However, the vaccinatio­n plan should have been handled with more prudence and transparen­cy,” the group added.

On Feb. 25, PGH administra­tors announced that it would “take whatever vaccine becomes available.”

Welcome party

The doctors noted that 94 percent of health-care workers and employees who had preregiste­red for the hospital’s vaccine program “expressed willingnes­s to be immunized, under the impression that the vaccine to be administer­ed has undergone the proper evaluation process by the FDA, HTAC and Nitag (National Immunizati­on Technical Advisory Group).”

Nitag on Friday recommende­d the vaccine for health workers without specifying that they were for pandemic front-liners.

PGH, a COVID-19 dedicated hospital, is set to be the first recipient of the country’s first batch of CoronaVac to be delivered to the country.

President Duterte will lead top government and military officials who will welcome the donated vaccine on Sunday.

Only two physicians— Health Secretary Francisco Duque III and Dr. Jaime Cruz, special envoy to China for trade and market access—will be in his large entourage of VIPs.

They will be accompanie­d by, among others, Chinese Ambassador Huang Xilian and several Cabinet members, including Executive Secretary Salvador Medialdea, Foreign Secretary Teodoro Locsin Jr., Defense Secretary Delfin Lorenzana and Secretary Carlito Galvez Jr., who is in charge of the national vaccinatio­n program.

Philippine National Police chief Gen. Debold Sinas and military Chief of Staff Gen. Cirilito Sobejana and his service commanders will be in the entourage.

“We are excited over the vaccine’s arrival,” presidenti­al spokespers­on Harry Roque said at a press briefing on Saturday.

Nobody being forced

The Sinovac shots will kick off the government’s COVID-19 mass vaccinatio­n program, with health-care workers in Metro Manila, Cebu and Davao to be prioritize­d for the jabs. The military will receive 100,000 doses of the two-shot vaccine.

“This is a safe vaccine and this will be beneficial to healthcare workers,” Roque said.

But he said health-care workers would not be forced to get Sinovac and would remain on the priority list of those to be inoculated

once their preferred brand becomes available.

“They won’t lose their priority standing. But this is only for health-care workers,” he said.

A day after the Sinovac vaccine arrives, the Philippine­s will receive 525,600 doses of AstraZenec­a vaccines.

Roque said the shipment was part of the “first round of allocated doses from the COVAX facility,” the internatio­nal vaccine pool managed by the World Health Organizati­on, the Global Alliance for Vaccines and Immunizati­on, the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedne­ss Innovation­s and the United Nations Children’s Fund.

The country was to receive 44 million doses of assorted vaccines from COVAX to inoculate 20 percent of the country’s population, he said.

The AstraZenec­a vaccine that will arrive on Monday will be part of the 5.2 million to 9.2 million AstraZenec­a shots that the Philippine­s expects to get from the COVAX facility.

In a video message sent to Palace reporters, Roque thanked British Ambassador Daniel Pruce for expediting the shipment of the vaccine.

Vaccinatio­n Program Act

Aside from the AstraZenec­a shots, the Philippine­s expects to get 117,000 doses of the vaccine produced by Pfizer-BioNTech also from the COVAX facility.

At the House of Representa­tives, Speaker Lord Allan Velasco thanked the President for immediatel­y signing the COVID-19 Vaccinatio­n Program Act on Friday, just days after Congress passed the measure.

“With this new law, the Philippine­s will now be in a better position to defeat the virus and protect the health of its 110 million people,” Velasco said in a statement.

The law will fast-track the procuremen­t and administra­tion of vaccines and create a P500-million indemnific­ation fund for those who may suffer severe adverse reaction after they are inoculated.

 ?? —RICHARD A. REYES ?? FIRST STOP Some of the Sinovac vaccine doses donated by China and expected to arrive in the country today are to be initially stored in this office in Barangay Concepcion I, Marikina City.
—RICHARD A. REYES FIRST STOP Some of the Sinovac vaccine doses donated by China and expected to arrive in the country today are to be initially stored in this office in Barangay Concepcion I, Marikina City.
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