Chinese officials urge elderly to get COVID vaccine, cite lesson of Hong
Kong
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[March 18, 2022]
BEIJING (Reuters) -Older people in
China should get vaccinated against COVID-19, senior Chinese health
officials said on Friday, adding that deaths among the elderly in the
latest wave to hit Hong Kong serve as a lesson for the mainland.
"The outbreak in Hong Kong is a particularly profound lesson for us, an
example that if the vaccination rate for the elderly is low, the rate of
severe cases and deaths will be high," Wang Hesheng, deputy director of
the National Health Commission, told a news briefing.
"We must not regret when it is too late," he said.
Only 19.7% of people aged over 80 in China have received a COVID-19
vaccine booster as of March 17, and just 50.7% of that age group have
completed their primary vaccinations, said Zeng Yixin, another NHC
deputy director.
Densely populated Hong Kong has registered the most deaths per million
people globally in recent weeks - more than 24 times that of rival
Singapore - due to a large proportion of elderly who were unvaccinated
as the highly transmissible Omicron variant ripped through care homes.
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An elderly woman receives a dose of Sinovac Biotech's CoronaVac
COVID-19 vaccine, following the coronavirus disease (COVID-19)
outbreak, at a community vaccination centre, in Hong Kong, China,
February 25, 2022. REUTERS/Tyrone Siu
Chinese officials have made its
clear that China will not anytime soon ditch its "dynamic-clearance"
policy that aims to contain each flare-up quickly, or loosen its
weeks-long quarantine requirement for most international travellers.
These stringent measures have helped mainland China keep its
official death toll largely static since 2020, with only two
fatalities reported in 2021 and none so far this year.
For mainland Chinese aged 60-69, 56.4% have received a booster shot
while that falls to 48.4% for those aged 70-79, Zeng said.
He added that there are still 52 million people over 60 who have not
completed their primary vaccinations.
(Reporting by Roxanne Liu and Ryan Woo; Editing by Edwina Gibbs)
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