180,000 people in GD receive COVID-19 vaccine


Shirley Liang   |   December 27, 2020

ABOUT 180,000 people in key groups in Guangdong, China’s most populous province, had received free COVID-19 vaccine shots by Tuesday, the provincial government said Wednesday.

No serious side effects have been reported among the vaccine receivers, the Information Office of the People’s Government of Guangdong Province said at a press briefing in Guangzhou.

A staff member displays a sample of the COVID-19 inactivated vaccine at a vaccine production plant of China National Pharmaceutical Group Co., Ltd. (Sinopharm) in Beijing. Xinhua

The groups include workers involved in cold-chain import logistics, quarantine venues, customs and immigration inspection, cross-border transport, health care, front-line epidemic control and public transport, and those working or studying overseas.

They are considered high-risk groups and more prone to infection. Their vaccination is meant to protect their health and help control the pandemic, Duan Yufei, director of the provincial health commission, said.

Vaccinations will be expanded to the general public after the vaccines are officially launched and supply increases, he said.

Even after the vaccines enter the market, the public should still exercise full epidemic control measures for a considerable period of time, he said.

Guangdong remains a low-risk region and current measures have proved effective in controlling the epidemic, Duan said.

He said the province can conduct 1.45 million nucleic acid tests a day.

After the central authorities started vaccination work, the Guangdong provincial authorities allocated funds, procured vaccines, distributed the vaccines to localities, regulated vaccine storage and warehousing, established expert terms to formulate plans and trained inoculation personnel.

COVID-19 vaccines developed by China National Biotec Group Co. are displayed at the China International Fair for Trade in Services in Beijing on Sept. 6. CGTN

Every vaccinated person is recorded and each dose of vaccine is traceable, he said, with medical support in place at inoculation venues.

Deng Huihong, director of the provincial center for disease control and prevention, said, however, that some people are not suitable for vaccination at the moment. They include those younger than 18 and older than 59, those who have experienced serious side effects after receiving other vaccines, pregnant women, and those with acute diseases, serious chronic diseases or fever.

People who have received the COVID-19 vaccine shots are required to download a mobile phone app to report their health conditions every day for a week.

Appointments for vaccinations are made by organizations representing the key groups. The city authorities in Guangdong will issue information later on inoculation sites for those planning to work or study overseas, Deng said.

Meanwhile, an investigation has revealed that a 31-year-old woman worker at a quarantine hotel in Guangzhou’s Nansha District who was confirmed as an asymptomatic carrier Dec. 20 was infected by a visitor from Myanmar who stayed at the hotel, Duan said. Strict testing and screening among related people and management of related places was implemented after the case was reported, and the risk of further transmission is low, he said, adding that the management of quarantine hotels across the province has been strengthened.

Editor/Li Jing

Source/Xinhua, China Daily

WeChat Editors/Holly, Jane

Shared with the permission of Shenzhen Daily