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Showing posts with label Vaccine Diplomacy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Vaccine Diplomacy. Show all posts

Sunday, 29 May 2022

China's Covid-19 vaccine push falters as nations switch to mRNA shots


PUBLISHED  

Many governments that once relied on Chinese shots are now ordering or seeking donations of mRNA vaccines instead. PHOTO: AFP

BEIJING (BLOOMBERG) - In the early days of the Covid-19 vaccine rollout, Chinese shots saved countless lives. They kick-started inoculation programmes across Asia, Latin America and the Middle East, while richer countries hoarded scarce mRNA shots from Pfizer and Moderna.

But many governments that once relied on vaccines from Sinovac Biotech or Sinopharm Group are now turning to options from the United States and Europe instead, as concerns mount about Chinese vaccines' efficacy against the Delta strain and the Western stranglehold on mRNA supplies grows looser.

That preference may already be showing up in China's customs data, where exports of human vaccines dropped 21 per cent in August to US$1.96 billion from US$2.48 billion in July, after rising steadily since December 2020.

"Basically people took what they could get" when Covid-19 vaccines first became available, said Nicholas Thomas, an associate professor at the City University of Hong Kong who has edited several books on foreign policy and public health.

"But as this has gone on, general populations - rather than just medical practitioners - have become more educated about the differences," he said. "They have realised that not all vaccines are equal in terms of protection."

This shift played out during Thailand's deadly outbreak earlier this year. As cases surged and South-east Asia emerged as the new epicentre of the pandemic, the nation desperately tried to purchase vaccines. Only one supplier came through in time: China's Sinovac.

The shots allowed the country of 70 million to begin its inoculation campaign earlier than hoped, but Thailand soon confronted a challenge now faced by lawmakers across the developing world.

The efficacy of China's inactivated vaccines ranges from about 50 per cent to 80 per cent in clinical trials. But they are less potent than mRNA vaccines and questions are mounting about their effectiveness against the highly transmissible Delta variant.

As a result, the Thai government became the first in the world to offer an AstraZeneca shot to people who had already received a jab or even two of Sinovac. While it is not an mRNA, Thai studies showed the Cambridge, UK-based company's viral vector vaccine is potent as a booster to the Chinese shot, and that Pfizer's dose was found to be even more effective.

But many Thais soon expressed a strong preference for Western shots - even protesting to demand them - and the country's opposition began lambasting the government for its reliance on China. Thailand halted orders of Sinovac and began buying more Western vaccines.

I'm not anti-Sinovac," said Chaowat Sittisak, a 29-year-old teacher in northern Thailand who got a first dose of Sinovac but ordered a second Moderna shot from a private hospital. "If the world only had one vaccine and it's Sinovac, I'd get it. But we have so many other choices. And I want whatever is best."

Many governments that once relied on Chinese shots are now ordering or seeking donations of mRNA vaccines instead. The swing away from China is likely to accelerate as US President Joe Biden promises to donate 1.1 billion mRNA shots, Europe pledges hundreds of millions of vaccines and India prepares to once again export AstraZeneca vaccines after curtailing shipments following its deadly second wave.

In addition to availability and efficacy, freedom of movement may also be motivating the shift: Recipients of Chinese vaccines cannot travel to some locations.

Vaccine exports

In a written reply to Bloomberg, Sinovac said its CoronaVac shot has been effective at preventing hospitalisation, intensive care admissions and deaths throughout the pandemic.

A spokesperson said some countries first rolled out Sinovac to the elderly, who are more likely to be hospitalised with Covid-19, while younger populations received different vaccines later, "and this should be factored in the evaluation of CoronaVac's effectiveness".

Many countries, including Thailand, have "purchased vaccines from multiple suppliers in order to maximise the number of doses available for their population," the company said.

As things stand, the list of places shifting away from Chinese vaccines - or augmenting them with Western boosters - includes Turkey and the United Arab Emirates. In China's own territory of Hong Kong, which has long offered residents a choice between BioNTech and Sinovac, health officials are now testing whether the Chinese shot will perform better when paired with a western booster.

While Sinovac allowed Thailand to start its rollout earlier than planned, the 6 million doses arriving in October will be the last shipment. In 2022, at least three quarters of the government's orders will also come from Astra and Pfizer.

Moves like Thailand's represent a blow to China's vaccine diplomacy ambitions. Nevertheless, governments face a tricky balance between wanting to protect the public and maintaining good relations with China.

The Thai Health Ministry has been careful to say that while it has no plans to order more Sinovac, it is not suggesting the shots are not effective. Chinese firms have exported some 884 million doses of its homegrown vaccines via mostly bilateral deals with places like Brazil and Indonesia.

This week, Chile started giving Sinovac shots to children as young as six, a strong endorsement of a shot that's formed the backbone of their rollout.

And there are still many parts of the world drastically short of vaccines. Some African nations, for instance, have barely started their inoculation drives after struggling to procure shots.

Cote d'Ivoire, Burkina Faso and Kenya are all rolling out Chinese vacciness, and Beijing is a key supplier to the World Health Organisation-backed Covax facility aimed at getting vaccines to the developing world. President Xi Jinping has pledged to export 2 billion doses this year, matching commitments by Group of Seven nations.

Various studies conducted around the world have shown the jabs to be effective at preventing serious illness and death. Yet China's pharmaceutical firms - which were initially less forthcoming than western companies in releasing clinical trial data - have not released similarly conclusive studies that inactivated vaccines are effective against the Delta.

Over the coming year, policymakers may well continue turning away from the older technology of the inactivated Chinese vaccines, says Benjamin Cowling, a professor of epidemiology and biostatistics at the University of Hong Kong, who published a recent study in the Lancet showing the Pfizer vaccine generated 10 times more antibodies than Sinovac.

"If you've got some vaccines that are more effective than others, and the cost is roughly the same, then you're going to get a better bang for the buck if you choose the more effective vaccines," Cowling said. "But I still think that the supplies are limited, so it may not be as easy as saying, 'We just want to order the Moderna vaccine,' or whatever."

'Better alternatives'

In Thailand, the opposition Move Forward party is now calling on the government to reveal the percentage of people who have only received the Sinovac shots.

"The government already knows that studies and research show inactivated virus vaccines are less effective against virus mutations when compared to mRNA-based vaccines," said Wiroj Lakkhanaadisorn, an opposition lawmaker and a key critic of the government's vaccine policies. "We should know the vaccination rate that excludes all two-dose Sinovac shots because the immunity may not be enough any more. Any regions that are ready can then reopen."

Thailand's health ministry didn't respond to a request for comment.

Chaowat, the teacher, said he felt pressured to take the Sinovac shot because of his job but is hoping to get a Moderna shot in a month or two.

"The government is turning away from Sinovac because they have to push through with their reopening plan and they want to reduce vaccine hesitancy among people who don't want Sinovac," he said. "They're turning to better alternatives."

Source: https://www.straitstimes.com/asia/east-asia/chinas-covid-19-vaccine-push-falters-as-nations-switch-to-mrna-shots


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Sunday, 16 May 2021

*08.05.21 Authoritarian states to subvert democracy are using COVID vaccines

Mitigating the risks of authoritarian-sourced vaccine distribution

Kevin Sheives and Ryan Arick

https://asia.nikkei.com/Opinion/Authoritarian-states-are-using-COVID-vaccines-to-subvert-democracy

Boxes of Sinovac Biotech's CoronaVac vaccine arrive in a Chinese military aircraft at an air base in Pasay, Metro Manila, on Feb. 28: Chinese vaccines have become not just tools for influence but leverage.   © Reuters


Kevin Sheives is the Associate Director and Ryan Arick is the Program Assistant at the International Forum for Democratic Studies at the National Endowment for Democracy.

China and Russia are engaged in a diplomatic offensive to gain maximum advantage from the global distribution of their vaccines. Asia -- along with Latin America and Africa -- is poised to be a major recipient of these vaccines.

China has already supplied over 240 million doses (and counting) to at least 78 countries, while Russia has supplied 12.8 million doses to over 30 countries at a far slower rate. Regrettably, elements within these authoritarian governments have coopted these vaccine distribution pipelines to serve their regime's interests and, in some cases, favored those interests over those of recipient populations desperately in need of vaccination.

For authoritarian countries involved in global vaccine diplomacy, these tools meant to strengthen their soft power are often exploited to become sharp.

In our research over the past year assessing COVID-19's impact on democracy, we've identified four problems in vaccine diplomacy patterns from authoritarian governments

  • they spread outright disinformation about Western vaccines, 
  • prioritize being first over being trustworthy, 
  • target political elite networks for early access, and 
  • secure unrelated political interests in exchange for vaccines.

First, as vaccines began to be developed, authorities in Russia and China employed information manipulation strategies to sow distrust in Western vaccines.

U.S. officials alleged that Russian intelligence agencies launched online disinformation campaigns to weaken confidence in Pfizer-BioNTech's vaccine, openly question the validity of clinical trials, and overemphasize the vaccine's reported side effects. A Beijing-organized propaganda network spread misinformation and disinformation on social media quickly after Pfizer reported its clinical data, while its diplomats quickly amplified these manufactured social media posts.

These disinformation networks aren't occasional gaffes or examples of officials caught off-script. They're coordinated, government-driven campaigns against proven competitor vaccines.

With authoritarian governments, it can be difficult to sort fact from fiction, and science from propaganda. Just a day after Gao Yu, the head of China's Center for Disease Control and Prevention, acknowledged the country's vaccines had lower than expected efficacy rates and suggested mixing doses, China's propaganda system quickly moved to shoehorn his scientific analysis into the Chinese Communist Party-preferred narrative on the vaccines. Gao's comments were censored on China's news and social media platforms, and the state tabloid Global Times spun Gao's comments as referring to "all vaccines," not China's.

Secondly, authoritarian governments prioritize speed and "being first" over following scientific and international norms that build trust in public health initiatives.

Russia launched its COVID-19 vaccine in August, named "Sputnik-V" in honor of the Soviet Union's 1957 success in deploying its Sputnik satellite to outer space before the West. The Sputnik V vaccine was launched before proper testing was completed and the Russian program attempted to steal research from Western institutions.

A health worker receives a dose of Sputnik V in Caracas, Venezuela, on Feb. 23: the vaccine was launched before proper testing was completed.   © Getty Images

Russia's chief sovereign wealth funder of the vaccine put it best: "Americans were surprised when they heard Sputnik's beeping. It's the same with this vaccine. Russia will have got there first."

Russia immediately distributed these untested Sputnik-V doses to its allies Guinea and Venezuela. Countries that have since purchased the Russian vaccine experienced delayed shipments in receiving their doses. Airfinity, a London-based science analytics company, estimates Russia has only supplied 12.8 million doses after an initial pledge of 605 million doses.

As noted in the article "China cannot win the great vaccine diplomacy game without vaccines" published by Nikkei Asia on Apr. 18, concerns have arisen around the efficacy and supply capacity of China's vaccines. These failings have left recipient countries frustrated and openly critical of these unexpected shortfalls.

Russia and China also have targeted elites for early access to COVID-19 vaccines. This practice is consistent with Beijing and Moscow's preference to offer privileged engagement with political elites as a mechanism for influence and leverage.

In Peru, Beijing provided early vaccine access to high-ranking government officials and their patronage networks ahead of more vulnerable populations. Leaders in the Philippines, Venezuela, and Uganda, who received early shipments of China's Sinovac vaccines, prioritized their patronage networks and security personnel over the elderly and medical professionals.

Lastly, in China's case, vaccines are bargaining chips central to transactions where political favors are expected in return for the purchase or donation of doses. Once again, public health goals are made secondary to the regime's foreign policy demands.

Paraguay's Foreign Ministry accused brokers of offering China-made vaccines in exchange for severing ties with Taiwan. China rewarded Guyana with an increased vaccine supply after Guyana withdrew from an agreement with Taiwan that would establish a new Taiwan representative's office. Brazil reversed its earlier position on allowing China's Huawei to compete in Brazil as a potential 5G telecommunications infrastructure provider, likely in exchange for access to Sinovac vaccines. China's Foreign Minister Wang Yi promised Malaysia access to COVID vaccines, but then immediately asked for the release of Chinese fishermen arrested for trespassing in Malaysia's maritime waters. Beijing's vaccines have become not just tools for influence, but leverage.

As countries around the world accept these authoritarian-sourced vaccines to fill gaps in global vaccine distribution, they must not trade away their democratic principles and interests in the process.

Extravagant shows of affection for these vaccines, as in Serbia, can serve as propaganda tools for authoritarian leaders back in Moscow or Beijing. Political leaders and public health experts should maintain strict demands for testing, transparency, and data-sharing.

Journalists and activists should look closely at the points of entry for China's and Russia's vaccines to uncover pressure on political elites or quid pro quo arrangements meant to secure doses. State officials should understand the lasting political risks that can accompany deals for authoritarian-sourced vaccines. Social and traditional media platforms should continue applying content moderation rules to combat disinformation peddling false narratives about well-tested vaccines.

The goal for vaccine distribution is to build public trust and defeat COVID-19, not to burnish authoritarian egos and regime interests. Without these mitigating measures, jabs to the arms around the world ultimately will be jabs to democratic practice.

https://asia.nikkei.com/Opinion/Authoritarian-states-are-using-COVID-vaccines-to-subvert-democracy

Thursday, 29 April 2021

13 Jan 2021: What if China’s COVID-19 vaccines are the least effective?

CoronaVac, a vaccine by Sinovac Biotech, may only be a little more than 50% effective in preventing COVID-19, according to clinical trial results in Brazil. While this clears the threshold for regulatory approval, it is a disappointing result for countries that already bought tens of millions of doses of the product.

How effective is Sinovac Biotech’s vaccine, really? Three preliminary reports from clinical trials in Brazil have consecutively indicated that CoronaVac, as the company calls its COVID-19 shot, has an effectiveness of 78%less than 60%, and just over 50%


Yanzhong Huang, a scholar of public health in China, had this reaction:

  • “I am perplexed by this news. I had had higher expectations on Sinovac’s vaccine in mitigating the vaccine apartheid between wealthy and poor nations.”
  • But also: “50% efficacy rate is not bad — it means the vaccine can reduce risk of infection by 50%; the problem is the way the effectiveness of the vaccine has been framed and presented.”

Anything above 50% efficacy is considered enough for regulatory approval, but the lower the efficacy, the more people need to be given a shot before a population can reach herd immunity. 

  • This has implications for China’s domestic vaccination program, which aims to innoculate 50 million people by mid-February using both CoronaVac and a shot developed by Sinopharm. 
  • It also has diplomatic ramifications: “At least 10 countries have ordered more than 380 million doses of the Sinovac inoculation,” per the New York Times, which also quotes Huang: “Countries with opposition parties might use [the lower efficacy data] to challenge the decision made by the incumbent government, and that will likely have domestic political implications in these countries.” 

It is still true that China will vaccinate much of the world, and Chinese vaccine diplomacy has attracted attention from many leaders from Latin America to Southeast Asia and the Middle East. Chinese vaccines from both Sinovac and Sinopharm are easier to store than those made by Pfizer or Moderna, and therefore easier to distribute in countries with logistical challenges — like Indonesia. 


  • Indonesia is rolling out the Sinovac shot, and President Joko Widodo appeared on television today to receive the first dose in the country after government approval. 
  • As the world’s fourth-most-populous country, with 270 million people, Indonesia will need “about 427 million shots, given the estimate that 15% may be wasted,” in order to reach its goal of inoculating two-thirds of its population.
  • Turkey also approved the Sinovac shot today, the AP reports, and began a large-scale rollout. Turkey, Indonesia, and Brazil are three of the main countries that ran clinical trials of CoronaVac, along with Chile and the Philippines. 


Finally, a note of caution on efficacy data, from BBC health reporter Philippa Roxby

On the face of it, the 50% effectiveness figure isn’t as good as Oxford’s 70% or Pfizer and Moderna’s 95%. But trials are run very differently in different countries — the numbers of volunteers enrolled varies wildly, as do the criteria used to test how much protection the vaccines offer…

So it’s only when the full data from all trials of this vaccine are published that scientists can analyze its real efficacy, and compare like with like. Only limited data for this Sinovac vaccine is currently available — and experts say that is confusing the picture.

https://supchina.com/2021/01/13/what-if-chinas-covid-19-vaccines-are-the-least-effective/


Thursday, 15 April 2021

*Why nations relying on China's Covid jabs are at risk of more waves - Daily Mail

Why nations relying on China's Covid vaccines are at risk of the disease resurging: Experts warn Beijing-made jabs being rolled out in 53 countries 'will not be enough to stop the virus circulating'

  • At least 53 countries worldwide have ordered doses of Chinese jabs, many of which are in developing nations 
  • China over the weekend conceded that the efficacy of its vaccines were not ideal, in a rare public admission
  • Chile has seen its infection rate more than double since mid-February despite vaccinating 40% of population



Countries relying on China's Covid vaccines may be vulnerable to future waves of the disease, scientists warned today.

Experts told MailOnline the spiralling crisis in Chile should send a warning to the rest of the world that Chinese-made jabs are too weak to halt the spread of the virus, even with a successful immunisation programme.

At least 53 countries have ordered doses of the Chinese vaccines, many of which are developing nations in South America, Africa and South East Asia. The fact they are cheap and easy to store has made them ideal for countries which do not have the special equipment to keep other jabs at ultra-cold temperatures.  

China's top health official conceded the efficacy of its vaccines were not ideal, in a rare public admission over the weekend. Gao Fu, director of the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention admitted 'protection rates of existing vaccines are not high'.

Professor Ian Jones, a virologist at the University of Reading, told MailOnline the figures from Chile suggest the Chinese vaccines 'will not be enough to stop the virus circulating'.

Despite fully vaccinating a quarter of its population and getting a single dose to 40 per cent, Chile has seen its infection rate double since mid-February, rising from 177 daily cases per million to 372. More than 80 per cent of the country has been forced to retreat back into lockdown, which was used by No10's scientists as proof the UK is not out of the woods. 

However, the South American nation is primarily using the CoronaVac vaccine, made by Chinese pharma giant Sinovac, which a University of Chile study found was only 3 per cent effective after the first dose, rising to 56.5 per cent two weeks after the second. Another study in Brazil found efficacy could be as low as 50 per cent, which just meets the World Health Organization's threshold for an acceptable vaccine.  

For comparison, the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines have efficacy rates of 95 per cent and 94 per cent, respectively, while AstraZeneca's is about 79 per cent. Trials of tens of thousands of patients given the US and British jabs found they stopped up to 100 per cent of hospitalisations and deaths, compared to CoronaVac's 84 per cent. 

Another Chinese-made vaccine made by state-owned pharmaceutical firm Sinopharm appears slightly better than the CoronaVac, 73 per cent efficacy against symptomatic illness. However, because China has refused to publish robust data in a medical journal means experts cannot be sure how effective the jab really is. But Mr Gao's remarks over the weekend suggest even Chinese officials are not confident in the vaccine.   

Scientists fear the Chinese jabs allow too many people to slip through the cracks of immunity, leaving a significant proportion of the population vulnerable to falling severely ill with the disease. But they admitted a jab above 50 per cent efficacy is better than none. 


Professor Jones said his guess was that the technology was behind the low efficacy, adding: 'I assume it's the whole inactivated virus vaccine. 

'They are quick to make but they contain virus proteins which are irrelevant as far as protection goes so, in effect, a good proportion of what you receive is wasted.' 

However, Professor Jones said these types of vaccines are unspecific, causing the immune system to release lots of antibodies that do not actually help fight the real coronavirus.  

Moderna and Pfizer's vaccines, on the other hand, use mRNA technology which use a synthetic piece of genetic material to carry instructions directly to the cells, telling them how to recognise and defend against the disease.

AstraZeneca's vaccine is known as a 'viral vector'. It also carries genetic coding to the cell to prepare it for Covid infection, but it uses a weakened version of the virus that causes the code to transport it to the cells.

Professor Gabriel Scally, a public health expert at the University of Bristol, told MailOnline the crisis in Chile 'was not a great tribute to the Chinese vaccines'.

He added: 'They haven't been approved by any of the major medical regulators and there is very limited research evidence, they certainly don't appear to have a high level of effectiveness in the real world. And in the absence of data it's very difficult to know [how effective they really are]. The only benefit of them is the fact they're cheap.'

On whether countries rolling out Chinese vaccines should fear a resurgence of the virus, he said: 'I think they would have a right to be worried.'

But he admitted that a vaccine that's partially effective is better than none at all. 

He told MailOnline: 'That 50 per cent mark is the line in the sand that's drawn by the WHO, which is great. But I think it's beginning to dawn on people these [Chinese] vaccines aren't going to solve the problem completely.'

Professor Scally said the UK was 'in a different place' because it has highly effective vaccines in its arsenal, adding: 'As long as we take it easy [coming out of lockdown] we should be fine.' 

It has been suggested that China's attempt to supply the developing world with Covid jabs is the country's attempt at diplomacy. Professor Scally told MailOnline: 'Whether it's diplomacy or not, I don't know, I happen to think it's just China being China. 























WHICH COUNTRIES ARE USING CHINESE-MADE VACCINES? 

China has said it is giving 'vaccine aid' to around 50 countries. 

There are about a dozen Chinese vaccine candidates for Covid-19, but only five frontrunners have received approval from medical regulators.

EUROPE (% vaccinated in total - not just using China's jab)

Belarus (0.43%)*

Hungary (29.36%)

Montenegro (5.62%)

Serbia (25.23%)

Turkey (12.88%)

ASIA

Azerbaijan (7.29%)

Brunei (0.08%)*

Cambodia (5.81%)

Indonesia (3.66%)

Kyrgyzstan (0.01%) 

Laos (0.56%)*

Mongolia (No data)

Malaysia (1.75%)*

Pakistan (0.50%)*

The Philippines (0.80%)*

Thailand (0.70%)

SOUTH AMERICA

Argentina (9.91%)

Brazil (9.65%)

Bolivia (2.42%)*

Chile (38.47%)*

Colombia (4.33%)*

Dominica (24.69%)*

Dominican Republic (9.22%)*

Guyana (5.14%)*

Mexico (7.16%)

Peru (1.94%)*

Uruguay (23.77%)

MIDDLE EAST

Bahrain (33.04%)

Jordan (3.97%)*

United Arab Emirates (35.19%)*

AFRICA

Algeria (No data)

Benin (No data)

Cameroon (No data)

Congo (No data)

Comoros (No data)

Djibouti (No data)

Egypt (No data)

Equatorial Guinea (0.79%)*

Gabon (0.11%)*

Guinea (No data)

Morocco (12.12%)

Mozambique (0.18%)*

Namibia (0.10%)*

Niger (No data)

Senegal (2.05%)

Seychelles (65.60%)*

Sierra Leone (0.40%)*

Zimbabwe (1.30%)

* denotes old data, with all of the above jab figures compiled by the Oxford University-led OurWorldInData statistics tracker

'China has a very strong economic outreach, that's their modus operandi - whether it's buying farmland in New Zealand or investing in companies in the UK, that's just China being China.'

Since Mr Gao's comments over the weekend, Beijing has put out an interview with the official claiming that his comments were 'a complete misunderstanding', in a bid to save face.

Global Times, a state-run nationalist tabloid, quoted Mr Fu as saying: 'The protection rates of all vaccines in the world are sometimes high, and sometimes low. How to improve their efficacy is a question that needs to be considered by scientists around the world.'  

Many of the orders for China's vaccines have been placed by developing nations such as Zimbabwe, the Congo and Brunei, but a number of European countries have also started using them.

Hungary and Serbia, which have raced ahead of the rest of the EU in terms of vaccines administered, have both been scorned by the bloc for deviating from the its official rollout schedule.

But only 10 countries to have placed orders of the Chinese vaccines have immunised more than 10 per cent of their populations, making it difficult to discern how well the jabs are working in the real world.

Those countries are: Uruguay, Bahrain, Turkey, Chile, Seychelles, the United Arab Emirates, Morocco, Dominica, Serbia and Hungary.

The nations are also using a mixture of vaccines, for example Chile is vaccinating a smaller number with Pfizer's jab and Serbia and Hungary are also using the Russian Sputnik V jab, making it even more difficult to see the effect of the Chinese vaccines. 

Professor Jones told MailOnline: 'The trends could be the result of anything, better social distancing measures, age structure etc.

'And at only 10 per cent or less for usage, the numbers of immune people will not influence the spread yet so I don't think you can say much about the vaccine effect (or lack of it) in those countries. 

'However, the 3 per cent, 56 per cent figures (for CoronaVac) coupled with the CDC (Chinese health institute) statement do suggest it will not be enough to stop the virus circulating, particularly if it's a variant that also dodges some of the response.

'Whether it's enough to stop serious Covid and so address the hospitals clogging up and the CFR I guess remains to be seen.'

However, during his press conference on Saturday, Mr Gao revealed China, which has vaccinated around 160million people, was now considering using different jabs. He said: 'It's now under formal consideration whether we should use different vaccines from different technical lines for the immunisation process.'

His remarks are the biggest clue yet that the Chinese vaccines are not performing as well as hoped in the real world. 

But Chilean science minister Andres Couve leapt to the defence of the vaccines yesterday following the backlash. He revealed Chile's health ministry will shortly publish a real world study on the efficacy of the CoronaVac vaccine. 

He said it was important to focus on the data and the vaccine's effectiveness in reducing illness that required medical treatment or being hospitalised or dying, which he suggested it was doing.

Heriberto Garcia, head of Chile's Public Health Institute which approved CoronaVac's emergency roll-out, said people should not pay attention to headlines.

'The University of Chile study and the study the health ministry will release say the same thing: the number of people who fall ill and are hospitalized has decreased,' he told local newspaper La Tercera. 'We are going down the right path.' 

About 8million people have been given at least one vaccine in Chile, most of whom received the Chinese-made jab. 

Yet some experts have still pointed to Chile as a warning that easing restrictions in the UK too soon could lead to another nasty virus surge. 

Sir David King, former chief scientific adviser to the Government, told Sky News today: 'From the point of view of the population itself, we're all dying to get out of lockdown.

'From the point of view of the epidemic, I think it's all a little bit more worrying.'

He added: 'Chile is a country where the rate of vaccination amongst the population was third highest in the world – they were ahead of us in terms of the number of people who have had the vaccine – and they're suddenly now into a third wave.

'They now have 7,600 cases a day and the total number of people in Chile now who have Covid is over a million.

'So what has happened in Chile is very, very surprising – a high percentage of people have been vaccinated, but here's a variant of the disease coming through the country.'

England's chief medical officer Chris Whitty told a Downing Street press conference last week: 'We want to do things in a steady way because the assumption that just because you vaccinate lots of people, then the problem goes away, I think Chile is quite a good corrective to that.'

Why nations relying on China's Covid vaccines are at risk of more waves | Daily Mail Online


Excerpt from: 

https://codeblue.galencentre.org/2021/04/06/covid-19-vaccination-lessons-from-chile/

Covid-19 In Chile

Chile’s foresight led to early access to Covid-19 vaccines and the country having the fastest vaccination rate in the Americas. 

Vaccination of Chile’s health care workers commenced on Christmas Eve 2020 with the Pfizer vaccine and the population with the Sinovac vaccine at the end of January 2021.

The rapid vaccination drive has resulted in 35.5 per cent of its 19 million population having received one dose of the vaccine and 19.2 per cent fully vaccinated.

Chile, together with Israel and the United Arab Emirates, has one of the best vaccination rates in the world, and was on track to be amongst the first in the world to reach herd immunity.

The impressive vaccination rate contributed to policies and behaviours which led to a surge in March 2021. 

Chile opened its borders, eased restrictions on business, and created a permit system for Chileans to go on summer vacation, with more than four million who travelled around the country.

The number of new daily cases of 3,000 in February doubled to more than 6,000 daily in March 2021. There was a surge in deaths, leading to the health care system being close to breaking point with an occupancy rate of 95 per cent of intensive care unit beds and the establishment of overflow mortuaries.

The Chilean government responded by postponing the elections of representatives to draft a new constitution due on April 11, and instituting stringent movement restrictions on March 25, 2021, affecting about 80 per cent of the population. 

As the cumulative number of cases exceeded one million, Chile has closed its borders again and tightened an already strict lockdown, which included an evening curfew and a rule which only allows citizens to leave their homes twice a week.

The surge was attributed to the variants from Brazil and the UK, an inefficient contact tracing system, and a false sense of security due to the hype and fanfare about the vaccination programme which lulled the public into dropping their guard. In addition, about a quarter of medical professionals had gone on leave because of exhaustion, mental health problems, and even suicidal ideation.

Claudia Cortés, vice president of the Chilean Society of Infectious Diseases, reportedly stated: “The government was overoptimistic, and there was a mishandling of information around the good initial rollout of vaccines. It seems people got the impression everything is fine now, but there needs to be a clear message that the vaccines are just one part of combatting the pandemic. It does not mean that we can forget the basics like social distancing and wearing masks.”

Health Minister Enrique Paris admitted the government’s mistakes and acknowledged that it should have been more emphatic about conveying that the virus remained a big threat as Chileans became lax about non-pharmaceutical interventions.