The Philippines on Thursday received its second shipment of COVID-19 vaccines, this time from Britain's AstraZeneca, courtesy of the COVAX global facility which ensures equitable access to the much-needed jabs.
President Rodrigo Duterte received 487,200 doses of the vaccine. The Philippines got its first delivery, 600,000 jabs from China's Sinovac, on February 28.
"These vaccines should be treated as a global public good," Duterte said in his speech, noting that the jabs would "further boost" the country's immunization program.
The president also urged Filipinos to get vaccinated, saying it is the key to reopening the economy.
"I would like to appeal to all our kababayans, please get vaccinated against COVID-19 and be the government partner in preventing the further spread of the disease," he said.
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The vaccines will be used to sustain the country's immunization program which started this week with health workers and security forces. A total of 8,559 Filipinos have received their first dose of the Sinovac jab as of Wednesday, Cabinet Secretary Karlo Nograles said.
COVID-19 vaccine czar Secretary Carlito Galvez Jr. said the government aimed to finish inoculating all of the country's health workers within the month of March so that it could start distributing jabs to the general public by late April or early May, starting with the elderly and the poor.
Why do many prefer AstraZeneca?
Even before its arrival, several local government units had already placed orders for AstraZeneca vaccines mainly due to its estimated low price—P610 for two doses—in comparison to other vaccine brands that are priced in the thousands.
The vaccine, developed with the University of Oxford, is the second to secure emergency use authorization in the Philippines after Pfizer and BioNTech.
AstraZeneca earlier said that its COVID-19 vaccine has shown "an average efficacy of 70%" in trials. The results ranged between 62% and 90% efficacy depending on the vaccine dosage.
This is lower compared with the efficacy of coronavirus vaccines trialed by rivals Pfizer/BioNTech and Moderna which have come in at around 95%, but higher than China's Sinovac which has come in at around 50.4%.
Although developers AstraZeneca and the University of Oxford—as well as the World Health Organization—have insisted since the results of Phase-III clinical trials that their vaccine is safe and effective among people aged over 65, several countries currently advise against administering it to that age group.
Regulators in France and Germany limited the AstraZeneca jab to people aged under 65.
In the Philippines, over 300 companies have placed orders for some 17 million doses of AstraZeneca vaccines for their workers.
The Philippines hopes to vaccinate at least 70 million of its people this year but is negotiating orders for up to 92 million due to the expected problems in global supply.
—with reports from Agence France-Presse
Source: Spot PH
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