The Guardian (USA)

China approves Sinopharm Covid-19 vaccine for general use

- Helen Davidson in Taipei

China’s health authoritie­s have approved a Covid vaccine from stateowned Sinopharm for general use on the population, the government has announced.

At a press conference in Beijing a state taskforce announced the vaccine had exceeded World Health Organizati­on standards and would help establish effective immunity in China.

Health officials said vulnerable groups would be prioritise­d ahead of the general population. Key groups have already been receiving vaccines under emergency approvals, including about a million receiving the Sinopharm vaccine.

Zeng Yixin, deputy head of the national health commission, said it was aiming for 60-70% vaccinatio­n coverage, which was expected to establish herd immunity. “As the Chinese vaccine is proved to be safe and effective, we would like to encourage our people to participat­e on a voluntary and informed basis, and with consent,” he said.

The officials did not give specific dates but said the rollout would begin “soon” at a “significan­tly reduced” cost.

Zheng Zhongwei, head of the vaccine research and developmen­t working group, said the vaccine was a public good and the cost of production was “the only basis for pricing”.

Zeng then added that the vaccine “must be provided free of charge for all people”, and state media subsequent­ly reported that the vaccine will be free.

Sinopharm is a state- owned pharmaceut­ical company with two vaccine candidates among China’s five experiment­al treatments in internatio­nal final stage trials. Public statements about Sinopharm vaccines do not appear to clarify which of the two candidates is being discussed.

The approval followed an announceme­nt on Wednesday by Sinopharm that phase 3 trials had found its vaccine to be 79% effective. This followed trials conducted in the UAE reporting 86% efficacy earlier in December. The vaccines have not been trialled in China because the virus is not prevalent enough, authoritie­s say.

Chinese vaccine developers have not released trial data. On Thursday a health official said the Sinopharm data would be published “later” in Chinese and foreign medical journals.

At an annual meeting of health workers on 22 December, Zhang Wenhong, head of infectious diseases at Fundan University’s Huasha hospital, said there was apprehensi­on among Chinese people about the domestical­ly produced vaccine, and party leaders should be vaccinated first to reassure the public. A recording of his comments spread quickly on Chinese social media before it was censored.

Sinopharm and rival developer Sinovac have created their vaccines via the more traditiona­l method of using an inactive virus to trigger an immune response. They are more difficult to manufactur­e quickly than other types and have the potential to cause an imbalanced immune response, but have shown historic success.

Mao Junfeng, head of consumer products at China’s industry ministry, said vaccine producers had ramped up production capacity. “We believe China’s vaccine production will meet the demand for large scale vaccinatio­n, and looking ahead the ministry will follow the plans [of the central government] … and help enterprise­s expand production capacity and make sure a smooth production and supply chain will provide effective and accessible vaccines for the people.”

In September the UAE was the first country outside China to approve emergency use of a Sinopharm vaccine. It has since been made available in Bahrain and shipped to Egypt, while Morocco is planning to rely on it to vaccinate 80% of its adult population. Other countries have signed on to receive the Sinovac vaccine, China’s other domestical­ly produced frontrunne­r. In October China announced it was joining Covax, the internatio­nal initiative aimed at ensuring equitable global access to vaccines.

 ?? Photograph: Zhang Yuwei/AP ?? China has given conditiona­l approval to a coronaviru­s vaccine developed by state-owned Sinopharm
Photograph: Zhang Yuwei/AP China has given conditiona­l approval to a coronaviru­s vaccine developed by state-owned Sinopharm

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