BEIJING: As China's Health Ministry has designated Beijing, Shanghai
cities and Guangdong Province as the first places to use the newly produced
domestic A(H1N1) vaccine, some epidemic disease experts still argue about
its safety.
On Wednesday, Beijing began to have free inoculation of the A/H1N1 flu
vaccine for people over 60 years old and students at primary and middle
schools. The service, which is available for more than 1.8 million
residents, will continue until October 31.
The city has designated 486 clinics providing vaccination services to the
elderly. Students will be vaccinated at school.
However, Zhong Nanshan, an academician who is respected for his work in
China's fight against the outbreak of the severe acute respiratory syndrome
(SARS) in 2003, warned that "it still needs some time to prove the
reliability of the vaccine."
"The vaccine should be put into mass use only after it has been proved safe
through tests in many pilot places," Zhong said.
"Though vaccine inoculation is the basic way for the country to prevent
A(H1N1) flu, it needs time to see whether it has side effects on the human
body," Zhong said.
On Monday, China's State Food and Drug Administration issued the first
warrant for mass inoculation with domestic A(H1N1) flu vaccine, the first
country in the world to do so. It announced that the safety and
effectiveness of the vaccines had been proved in clinical tests.
But the clinical trial period for the vaccine was less than three months, in
sharp contrast with the prevailing practices among the international medical
community that it takes several years for a safety test.
Zeng Guang, chief expert of epidemic disease research at the Chinese Center
for Disease Control and Prevention, told Xinhua that "China has pushed the
vaccine development task in a quite urgent way following the serious
condition of A(H1N1) outbreak across the nation."
"We admit that the vaccine has some potential risks, as any vaccine
inoculation is not 100 percent safe. But we believe it is safer for Chinese
people to have the inoculation rather than being vulnerable to the disease,"
Zeng said.
By Monday, all 31 provinces and municipalities on the Chinese mainland had
reported A(H1N1) flu cases, with a total of 5,592.
Although so far nearly 70 percent have recovered and no deaths have been
reported, both the World Health Organization and domestic experts say they
believe the A(H1N1) flu epidemic will reach a peak in autumn and winter,
Health Minister Chen Zhu said Tuesday at a news conference.
Zeng said in order to better monitor the effectiveness of the vaccine, the
vaccine producing companies will shoulder the responsibility of collecting
the users' information, and make follow-up changes for the vaccine if
needed.
He also said if any vaccinated people showed side effects or other negative
symptoms, the case will be instantly reported to the local medical
authorities which would take timely treatment measures.
"So far, the vaccine is safe and effective," he said.
Source : China Daily