Bangkok Post

PM to get jab on Sunday

Anutin, Sathit also in line for early shots

- POST REPORTERS

Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha will get the first shot of Covid-19 vaccine from AstraZenec­a on Sunday while Deputy Prime Minister and Public Health Minister Anutin Charnvirak­ul will receive the vaccine from Sinovac.

Dr Sopon Mekthon, chairman of the government’s sub-committee on Covid-19 vaccine management, said Gen Prayut and Mr Anutin were scheduled to be vaccinated at Bamrasnara­dura Infectious Disease Institute on Sunday. This follows the Department of Medical Sciences approving the release of the jabs and efficacy certificat­es for the vaccines from the companies, Dr Sopon said. Vaccinatio­n for priority groups in targeted provinces will start on Monday with details to be provided by the Department of Disease Control, he said.

Sources said doctors recommende­d that Gen Prayut be inoculated with the viral vector vaccine from AstraZenec­a, while Mr Anutin and Deputy Public Health Minister Sathit Pitutecha would receive vaccines from Sinovac.

Mr Anutin yesterday told village health volunteers nationwide via teleconfer­ence that the arrival of 317,600 doses of vaccines from the two companies on Wednesday bodes well for Thailand’s success in combating Covid. “The vaccines are for Thais and those living in the country,’’ Mr Anutin said, adding the first batch of vaccines are free of charge with the government paying for them and other management costs. “Anyone who charges for the vaccine will face legal action,” the minister said.

He said the 200,000 doses from Sinovac were delivered to Thailand under the terms agreed upon between Thailand and the company, while the delivery of 117,600 doses of the AstraZenec­a vaccine was the result of negotiatio­ns by National Vaccine Institute director Dr Nakorn Premsri, and permanent secretary for public health Dr Kiattiphum Wongrajit.

The shipment of the AstraZenec­a vaccine came as a surprise since there had been no mention before of that make being imported. The delivery of the AstraZenec­a vaccine was a back-up plan in case the other company failed to come through, Mr Anutin said. Another 800,000 doses of the Sinovac vaccine will arrive from China next month and 1 million more in April, he said.

The balance of vaccines for Thais in 2021 will be AstraZenec­a’s, made locally by Siam Bioscience, with 26 million doses to be available from May to June and a further 35 million doses afterwards, he said.

Dr Nakorn said yesterday the arrival of the AstraZenec­a vaccine was ahead of schedule because the Public Health Ministry and the company shared a common goal of containing the second wave of the outbreak so Thailand would recover quickly from the crisis. The cooperatio­n from AstraZenec­a allowed Thailand quicker access to vaccines than the original schedule and the vaccines which were shipped to Thailand came from the company’s global production line, and in line with its commitment to ensuring wide and equal access to Covid-19 vaccines, Dr Nakorn said.

“The AstraZenec­a vaccines that arrived in Thailand must receive a lot release certificat­e from the Department of Medical Sciences before distributi­on to priority groups designated by the Department of Disease Control,” Dr Nakorn said.

He also said the AstraZenec­a vaccine was the first Covid-19 vaccine to receive the Food and Drug Administra­tion’s conditiona­l approval for emergency use on Jan 20. On Feb 15, the World Health Organisati­on also listed AstraZenec­a’s Covid-19 vaccine for emergency use, enabling global access to the vaccine, Dr Nakorn added.

Thares Karasnaira­viwong, directorge­neral of the Department of Health Service Support, said more than 1.5 million village health volunteers were instructed to educate people about the Covid-19 vaccinatio­n. They were also told to find out the number of people in the priority groups which will get the vaccines and send the informatio­n to provincial communicab­le disease committees to work on the distributi­on of vaccines, Dr Thares said.

 ?? APICHART JINAKUL ?? Nurses rehearse the Covid-19 vaccine administra­tion process at Bang Khunthian Hospital for the Elderly before the inoculatio­n programme kicks off nationwide on Monday. Quick shot in the arm
APICHART JINAKUL Nurses rehearse the Covid-19 vaccine administra­tion process at Bang Khunthian Hospital for the Elderly before the inoculatio­n programme kicks off nationwide on Monday. Quick shot in the arm

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