The Philippine Star

Phl secures 10 M Sputnik doses – Galvez

- By JOSE RODEL CLAPANO

The Philippine­s has secured 10 million doses of Sputnik V vaccines from Russian drug maker Gamaleya Research Institute, National Task Force against COVID-19 (NTF) chief implemente­r and vaccine czar Carlito Galvez Jr. said yesterday.

“On behalf of the National Task Forces against COVID-19 and the vaccine cluster, I would like to thank the Russian Direct Investment Fund (RDIF) of Russia and the Russian Ambassador Marat Pavlov for the delivery of 15,000 Sputnik V vaccines,” Galvez said, referring to the initial shipment that arrived last weekend after some delays.

He said the country is expecting the delivery of two million doses this May, followed by four to six million

doses in the coming months from RDIF. The contract with Gamaleya is expandable for up to 20 million doses.

With Sputnik V, the Philippine­s now has three brands in its vaccine supply inventory, as it fast-tracks the implementa­tion of the national immunizati­on program that aims to inoculate 50 to 70 million Filipinos by yearend.

The Department of Health (DOH) said it will conduct simulation exercises in Makati, Taguig, Muntinlupa, Manila and Parañaque cities to see where logistics improvemen­ts can be done, as the Sputnik V vaccine has different storage requiremen­ts compared to Sinovac and AstraZenec­a. Sputnik will be given to those aged 18 and above.

The DOH revealed 1.93 million doses of COVID-19 vaccines have already been administer­ed, with 1.6 million people receiving their first dose and 284,553 individual­s completing two doses.

DOH Undersecre­tary Maria Rosario Vergeire said confidence in vaccines had improved, with people becoming more open after seeing health care workers or neighbors receive the shots.

Of the vaccinated individual­s, only 2.1 percent have experience­d adverse events with no vaccine-related deaths recorded. “To date, there is no fatal event associated with COVID-19 vaccines in the country,” she added.

She also said vaccinatio­n of the A4 priority group would start in May or June when more vaccines arrive, explaining that the inoculatio­n of 5,000 essential workers last Saturday was merely “symbolic” as part of Labor Day celebratio­ns.

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