China
provides vaccine aid to 53 developing countries, exports to 22
By Leng
Shumei Published: Feb 08, 2021
https://www.globaltimes.cn/page/202102/1215285.shtml
China is providing vaccine aid to 53 developing
countries and exporting vaccines to 22 countries, including those in Africa
which lags behind in inoculation.
Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Wang Wenbin said at a press conference on
Monday that a shipment of Chinese COVID-19 vaccines will leave for Equatorial
Guinea on Tuesday.
The Global Times learned from Chinese vaccine producer Sinovac on Monday that
the company had delivered more than 10 million doses to countries in Asia, the
Mediterranean, Latin America, and Africa.
China has also decided to provide Egypt and the Arab League with batches of
COVID-19 vaccines, and is willing to facilitate Egypt's procurement of vaccines
produced by Chinese companies, said Chinese Ambassador to Egypt Liao Liqiang on
Sunday at an online press conference.
The move reflects the profound friendship between the heads of state of China
and Egypt and the sincere feelings of the Chinese people toward the Egyptian people,
and will help Egypt overcome the pandemic at an early date, the Chinese envoy
said.
The moves came amid reports of South African health officials' announcement on
Sunday of pausing the country's rollout of AstraZeneca's coronavirus vaccine
after a study showed it offered reduced protection against the COVID-19 variant
first identified there.
"I have been expecting a low efficacy of AstraZeneca's vaccine on the
variant in South Africa due to previous results of Pfizer and Moderna on the
variant, but have not thought it could be so low, nearly useless," Zhuang
Shilihe, a Guangzhou-based vaccine expert, told the Global Times on
Monday.
Nineteen of the 748 people in AstraZeneca's clinical trials in South Africa
were infected with the new variant, compared to 20 out of 714 people in the
group who were given a placebo, according to media reports.
Other world-leading vaccines producers, Pfizer, Moderna, Novavax, and Johnson
& Johnson, have also said that studies showed their COVID-19 vaccines were
less effective in South Africa than in the US.
Considering the low efficacy, Zhuang called for global vaccine makers to adjust
their vaccines to the new variant in South Africa immediately before it spreads
more widely in the world.
"mRNA vaccines may require 2-3 weeks to adjust coding. Inactivated
vaccines may take longer than two months as vaccines makers have to cultivate the new virus of the new variants, but as far as I know, Chinese vaccine makers are
able to adjust in a shorter period," Zhuang said.
The variant in South Africa accounts for about 90 percent of infections in that
country and is powering record case numbers in the sub-region. It has been
found in Botswana, Ghana, Kenya, Comoros, Zambia, and in 24 non-African
nations.
Gao Fu, director of the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention, said
at a previous conference that China's inactivated and recombinant protein
vaccines are still effective on the variant in South Africa as serum antibody
tests showed that efficacy against the variant only decreased by 1.6
times.
The data is not bad compared to the performance of AstraZeneca's vaccine, but
as it is only the result of a neutralization test of serum antibody, it still
requires clinical trials to determine the accurate efficacy of Chinese vaccines
on the new variant, Zhuang said.
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