WHO authorises China’s COVID-19 vaccine

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The World Health Organisation (WHO) approved the use of CanSinoBIO’s single-dose COVID-19 vaccine on Thursday.

After Sinovac and Sinopharm, it is the third Chinese-made vaccine to be approved by the WHO.

According to the WHO, it has a 64% efficacy against symptomatic disease and a 92% efficacy against severe Covid-19.

“The vaccine meets WHO standards for protection against Covid-19 and. The benefits of the vaccine far outweigh the risks,” the United Nations health agency said in a statement.

The WHO’s vaccine experts recommended it for people aged 18 and above.

The jab has already been rolled out in China, Argentina, Chile, Malaysia, Mexico, and Pakistan.

The WHO has now given EUL status to nine COVID-19 vaccines which included the Pfizer/BioNTech, AstraZeneca, Janssen, Moderna, Sinovac, Sinopharm, and Bharat Biotech, Novavax, and now CanSinoBIO.

The UN health agency began reviewing rolling data on the CanSinoBIO vaccine in August.

The WHO says EUL approval gives countries, funders, procuring agencies, and communities assurance that the vaccine has met international standards.

WHO’s listing paves the way for countries to approve and import a vaccine for distribution quickly, especially those without an international-standard regulator of their own.

It also opens the door for the jabs to enter the Covax global vaccine-sharing facility, which aimed to provide equitable access to doses around the world, particularly in poorer countries.

China, the last major global economy sticking to a rigid zero-COVID policy, had been said to be battling an economic slump due to prolonged virus lockdowns that had constricted supply chains, quelled demand, and stalled manufacturing.