Govt Approves Sinovac Use For Children As Young As 3

"); jQuery("#212 h3").html("

"); });
2021-11-20 HKT 11:29
The government has approved the use of the Sinovac vaccine for children as young as three years old, but agreed with its advisers that adolescents aged 12 to 17 will first be allowed to get the jab.
A government statement said the health secretary considers that the benefits of approving the lowering of the age limit for Sinovac shots outweigh the risks.
"Doing so can protect them from Covid-19 infection and also enable them to resume normal school and daily life as soon as possible," the statement read.
Authorities said relevant vaccination arrangements will be announced as soon as possible, and the scheme will be extended to younger children at a later stage.
Speaking after a radio programme, government pandemic adviser David Hui said allowing teenagers aged 12 to 17 to get Sinovac shots will definitely boost the vaccination rate.
Currently, those over 12 can already get the BioNTech jab, but Professor Hui said some parents are concerned about letting teens get that vaccine.
"Even though since we actually reduce the frequency of BioNTech to only one dose [for teenagers], we no longer see any myocarditis. But to some of the parents, they do have this concern. So I think the option of Sinovac to this age group, it will certainly increase the vaccination rate,"Hui said.
"If more than 70 percent of the schoolchildren have already received the vaccinations, they can actually have more freedom to open up, maybe even to full-day school, and also a lot of the extracurricular activities can actually take place,"he added.
Professor Hui said he believes primary school pupils will be allowed to get Sinovac jabs early next year, and the vaccination scheme will later be expanded to kindergarten children.
TOPPAN Edge Becomes Japans First Qualified VLEI Issuer
The Global Legal Entity Identifier Foundation (GLEIF) has announced TOPPAN Edge, a subsidiary of TOPPAN Holdings that p... Read more
SFC And Dubais DFSA Partner On Cross-Border Regulatory Cooperation
The Dubai Financial Services Authority (DFSA), the independent regulator of the Dubai International Financial Centre (D... Read more
Toss To Launch Finance Super-App In Australia, Plans Won-Based Stablecoin
South Korea’s fintech unicorn Toss is preparing to launch its finance super-app in Australia before the end of this y... Read more
China Funds Research On Stablecoins And Cross-Border Oversight
China’s largest government-backed research funder has begun accepting applications for studies on stablecoins and the... Read more
XTransfer, CZBank Shanghai Branch Form Cross-Border Finance Partnership
XTransfer has entered into a partnership with the Shanghai branch of China Zheshang Bank (CZBank). The agreement was si... Read more
Brinc Launches VentureVerse Through Acquisition Of OG Club
Brinc, a Hong Kong-based venture acceleration and corporate innovation firm, has acquired OG Club, a decentralised auto... Read more