Mainland Chinese head to Hong Kong for mRNA COVID vaccines
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[January 13, 2023]
By Joyce Zhou
HONG KONG (Reuters) - Scores of mainland Chinese travellers are rushing
to Hong Kong to receive mRNA COVID-19 vaccines, which are not available
on the Chinese mainland, as the country grapples with a torrent of
infections which have overwhelmed its health system.
A private hospital in the special Chinese administrative region of Hong
Kong welcomed the first batch of mainland customers on Thursday, just
five days after China reopened its borders for the first time in three
years, allowing quarantine free travel.
Yoyo Liang, a 36-year old Beijing resident, was one of the first
customers at the Virtus Medical Centre where she paid HK$ 1,888 ($241)
for her first BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine.
Liang had received three domestically developed vaccine doses from
China's Sinovac over the past two years but said she took Pfizer-BioNtech's
bivalent booster vaccine to better protect herself against the virus.
"I was very tempted to get the vaccine because of the border reopening.
There is no bivalent vaccine available in mainland Chin," she explained
after she received her jab.
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Yoyo Liang, from mainland China,
received a dose of BioNTech bivalent coronavirus disease (COVID-19)
vaccine at a private clinic in Hong Kong, China January 12, 2023.
REUTERS/Tyrone Siu
Virtus, which has received more than
300 inquiries so far about the vaccines, is expecting more mainland
customers to come to Hong Kong in the coming weeks and months, the
company's chief medical officer Samuel Kwok told reporters.
However, due to a large number of people already infected, many
would wait before taking a booster shot, he said.
"Demand is increasing but we understand that there are a lot of
people who got infected recently... they cannot get... a booster
dose immediately so they have to wait for at least three months."
China, home to 1.4 billion people, abruptly abandoned its zero-COVID
policy last month and infections are surging across a population
with little immunity after being shielded since the virus emerged
three years ago in the Chinese city of Wuhan.
(Writing by Farah Master; Editing by Alexandra Hudson)
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