Thailand To Stop Using Sinovac Covid Vaccine When Stocks End This Month

Thailand used over 31.5 million Sinovac doses since February, starting with two doses to frontline workers, high-risk groups, and residents of Phuket.

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Thailand was first country to combine a Chinese and Western shots. (File)
Thailand:

Thailand will stop using the COVID-19 vaccine of China's Sinovac when its current stock finishes, a senior official said, having used the shot extensively in combination with Western-developed vaccines. Thailand used over 31.5 million Sinovac doses since February, starting with two doses to frontline workers, high-risk groups, and residents of Phuket, a holiday island that reopened to tourists early in a pilot scheme.

In July, Thailand started inoculating people with Sinovac as a first dose followed by the Oxford University-developed AstraZeneca

Thailand was the first country to combine Chinese and Western shots, a strategy its health officials said has proved effective

"We expect to have distributed all Sinovac doses this week," said health official Opas Karnkawinpong, adding the programme will switch to combining the AstraZeneca vaccine with that made by Pfizer and BioNTech

Thailand next year plans to buy 120 million COVID-19 vaccine doses in total and has already booked 60 million doses of AstraZeneca, a vaccine it manufactures locally

Thailand has said it will only procure vaccines effective against new variants. It has so far vaccinated 36 per cent of the estimated 72 million people who live in Thailand and hopes to reach 70 per cent by year-end. The country is forging ahead with a quarantine-free reopening plan next month of 17 provinces to vaccinated arrivals from low-risk countries

Included will be destinations like Pattaya, Hua Hin, Chiang Mai, and Bangkok

Thailand has recorded nearly 1.8 million cases and 18,336 fatalities overall, more than 98 per cent in the past seven months.

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

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