BEIJING — China kicked off mass vaccinations for swine flu Monday in
Beijing, making it apparently the first nation in the world to start
innoculating its population against the virus. The Asian giant
has been at the forefront of international efforts to produce an
A(H1N1) influenza vaccine, with at least five companies receiving
government approval for the work. Officials however have warned demand
will exceed supply. The capital's municipal health bureau
announced Monday in a statement on its website that Beijing "took the
lead in China in starting A(H1N1) flu vaccinations". Authorities
kicked off the programme by immunising students due to take part in
next week's National Day celebrations, the statement said. Around
100,000 students are due to attend, according to recent state media
reports. "We believe that China is the first country in the world
to start mass vaccinations for A(H1N1) flu," Vivian Tan, spokeswoman
for the World Health Organisation in China, told AFP. The health
ministry has said it plans to vaccinate 65 million people, or five
percent of the country's total population of 1.3 billion, before year's
end. A total of 500 medical workers in nearly 50 teams have been
mobilised to go to schools across Beijing to give the students their
shots, which are free and voluntary, the health bureau reported. Apart
from students taking part in festivities marking the 60th anniversary
of the founding of communist China on October 1, medical workers,
border inspection and transportation workers will also have priority. The
military and police, other kindergarten, elementary and middle school
students and teachers, and those with chronic heart and lung diseases
will also be given priority, according to the health ministry. Shipments
of vaccines have so far been distributed to eight provinces including
Guangdong, Shandong, Sichuan and Hunan, where outbreaks have been the
most severe, state media has reported. Other nations are also preparing to vaccinate their populations against swine flu. Australia
is to start a mass adult immunisation programme on September 30, while
the United States has bought 195 million doses of swine flu vaccine and
will make shots available next month. Britain, meanwhile, has
received a first batch of 100,000 doses of swine flu vaccine, which
could be approved for public distribution by early October. On
Monday, China had recorded 13,262 cases of A(H1N1) flu, according to
the latest information released on the health ministry's website. No
deaths have yet been reported. A top ministry official predicted
earlier this month that tens of millions of people could be infected
with the virus in China in the coming months, leading to "unavoidable"
fatalities. The virus has now spread to all of China's 31
provinces and regions and 95 percent of the cases are being transmitted
domestically, rather than via travellers from abroad. By Friday,
A(H1N1) flu had killed nearly 3,500 people worldwide, and while the
Americas still have the highest death toll from the virus, cases are
expected to increase in Asia as the northern hemisphere enters winter. China
-- hit hard in the past by bird flu and Severe Acute Respiratory
Syndrome (SARS) -- took immediate measures to prevent the new virus
from entering the country when it was first uncovered in the Americas. It
subsequently came in for international criticism over its severe
quarantine rules, but authorities defended the moves as necessary to
fend off a mass outbreak of A(H1N1). |