NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

No need for further studies on Chinese vaccine: Govt

- BY VENERANDA LANGA Follow Veneranda on Twitter @LangaVener­anda

HEALTH and Child Care deputy minister John Mangwiro has told Senate that the Sinopharm vaccine from China does not need further studies as it has been extensivel­y researched on internatio­nally and locally to check its effectiven­ess against COVID-19.

Mangwiro said this last Thursday while responding to questions from senators on the effectiven­ess and possible side effects of the vaccine, whose 200 000 donated doses are already being distribute­d to different provinces.

“Before it is administer­ed on people, we have what we call the World Health Organisati­on which writes to confirm that yes, this vaccine does work, and for example, to see how it works, it can be administer­ed on a sample of five or ten healthy young men.

“We can have university students being experiment­ed on to see how this vaccine works. What we have now in the country is a vaccine that has been dealt with already,” Mangwiro said.

“They have studied it fully. We cannot continue to do further studies on the vaccine, we have what we call Medicines Control Authority of Zimbabwe that has the mandate to look at issues related to this. They do extensive research on such matters to obtain full details of how the vaccine works. They even reach out to countries as far as Chile, countries that would have volunteere­d to do such experiment­s,” he said.

Mangwiro said no vaccines were rolled out without being thoroughly looked at to study their side effects.

On the issue of 61% of the infected people in the country who have the South African variant of COVID-19, Mangwiro said: “There is nothing to be afraid of, variants will continue coming on a daily, weekly and monthly basis. The virus is also trying to fight the efforts to thwart it so that it is ever changing on a daily basis.”

Vice-President and Health and Child Care minister Constantin­o Chiwenga also told senators that there were now 22 variants of the virus in the world as it tried to constantly mutate.

Mangwiro said normally pregnant women and breastfeed­ing mothers do not get vaccinated because of the side effects of the medicines.

“However, if we find a vaccine which stipulates that we must do that; then we may, but due to the side effects of the virus — some may react and faint because their blood pressure would have lowered.”

He said whenever side effects occurred during the inoculatio­n exercise, there will be trays loaded with adrenalin, drips and needles to administer to those individual­s that would have reacted to the vaccine.

 ??  ?? Health and Child Care deputy minister John Mangwiro
Health and Child Care deputy minister John Mangwiro

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