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Covid-19 vaccination drive to start at February-end


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Covid-19 vaccination drive to start at February-end

By The Nation

 

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The Public Health Ministry aims to register the vaccine for Covid-19 in February and the first vaccination drive may start by the end of the month.

 

Speaking on progress in the procurement of the vaccine, Public Health permanent secretary Dr Kiattiphum Wongrajit said on Sunday that Sinovac’s inactivated vaccine was created using old technology that was safe. He said there were no reports of any serious side-effects from China's vaccine.

 

He said import of the vaccines will be gradual. The first lot of 200,000 doses from Sinovac will arrive at the end of February, 100,000 doses on March 8, and 1 million doses in April. Then in May, there will be a large batch of vaccines from AstraZeneca -- 26 million doses in the first lot, followed by another 35 million -- totalling 60 million doses for about 30 million Thais.

 

Vaccines from both companies must be registered by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) before they are used. The first lot is expected to be registered on February 14, which is intended to coincide with the Valentine's Day.

 

Dr Opas Karnkawinpong, director-general of the Disease Control Department (DDC), added that the first lot of vaccines would be for senior citizens aged 60 years and above, patients with underlying disease, and health personnel working on the frontline in maximum control areas [Samut Sakhon, Chonburi, Rayong, Chanthaburi and Trat].

 

“After receiving the vaccine, DDC and FDA will follow up by injecting patients for four weeks to ensure they don’t have side-effects. If there are concerns, the committee may stop the vaccination,” said Dr Opas. He said that the vaccines would be sent to around 11,000 local hospitals and health promotion clinics in each area to facilitate vaccination for the public.

 

Nakhon Premsri, director of the National Vaccine Institute, said a few vaccines had been tested in Phase 3, such as Pfizer's mRNA, which is 95 per cent effective, and requires two injections, 21 days apart. Moderna mRNA vaccine is 94.5 per cent effective. Both are registered in the United States with Pfizer registered in the United Kingdom as well.

 

There is also AstraZeneca viral vector vaccine, whose effectiveness is 62-90 per cent, depending on injection dose, registered in the UK, requiring two injections 28 days apart.

 

The Russian vaccine is viral vector with 92 per cent effectiveness, two injections 24 days apart; inactivated vaccine of the Chinese company, with effectiveness at 79 per cent, requiring two injections 21 days apart.

 

The inactivated vaccine from Sinovac has 78 per cent effectiveness, requiring two injections, 14 days apart. The vaccine is now in the registration process in China.

 

“Each vaccine has some side-effects, some of them quite common, such as fever, headache, pain near the injection area.

 

No serious side-effects have been reported for all five vaccines.

 

When more than a million vaccines are used, side-effects may be difficult to find though small numbers will gradually appear. In this case, vaccination in urgent conditions with severe outbreaks must weigh the results in terms of controlling outbreaks, reducing morbidity and the side-effects of the vaccine,” said Dr Nakhon.

 

Source: https://www.nationthailand.com/news/30401051

 

 

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-- © Copyright The Nation Thailand 2021-01-12
 
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2 hours ago, webfact said:

Vaccines from both companies must be registered by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) before they are used. The first lot is expected to be registered on February 14, which is intended to coincide with the Valentine's Day.

I fail to see what registration of a Covid - 19 vaccine has to do with Valentines Day!

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8 minutes ago, FarFlungFalang said:
3 hours ago, webfact said:

 

“After receiving the vaccine, DDC and FDA will follow up by injecting patients for four weeks to ensure they don’t have side-effects.

How does injecting patients for four weeks ensure they don't have side effects?

 

Again... ... really W.T.F.  is going on in the mind of whoever said or thought that !!!! 

 

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In this case I think the interpretation has been incredibly clumsy... I suspect they really mean they will observe patients who have received the vaccine for up to four weeks to ensure there are no side effects. 

Though, why only 4 weeks is a mystery, patients who have received a vaccine should be observed indefinitely and told to report anything strange or different. 

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2 hours ago, FarFlungFalang said:
5 hours ago, webfact said:

“After receiving the vaccine, DDC and FDA will follow up by injecting patients for four weeks to ensure they don’t have side-effects.

How does injecting patients for four weeks ensure they don't have side effects?

I was more worried about the size of the needle required, needing that long just for one injection -'injecting patients for four weeks'

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Johnson and Johnson to announce the results of its large South African trial Monday US time.

This is a one jab easy storage vaccine.

If over 70% effective it's a game changer for the world

https://www.livemint.com/companies/news/johnson-johnson-to-submit-trial-data-of-single-dose-covid-vaccine-this-month-11610424270775.html

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I also heard on the local radio that the government has approved providing the vaccine privately via hospitals. No idea if it's true but, for us expats who won't be covered by the Thai national scheme, it offers some hope we can get innoculated this year. 

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