China was ready to approve Western mRNA vaccines months ago. Why is it still holding off?
When the highly infectious Delta variant hit China in the summer, some public health experts were hopeful that the country could soon receive an immunity boost from BioNTech's highly effective mRNA Covid-19 vaccine.
In July, the shot was reported to have passed an expert review by Chinese regulators and was in the administration review stage, according to Fosun Pharma, the Chinese partner of BioNTech licensed to produce and distribute the vaccine in the Greater China region. Fosun was even planning to start domestic trial production by the end of August.
However, five months later there is still no word from Chinese officials on when — or whether — the vaccine will ever be approved, even as the newly emerged Omicron variant poses a fresh challenge to China's zero-Covid strategy — and its less effective domestic vaccines.
Much remains unknown about the fast-spreading Omicron variant, which carries an unusually large amount of mutations that scientists worry could potentially make it more transmissible and less susceptible to existing vaccines.
Preliminary lab studies show two doses of the BioNTech vaccine, which is produced by Pfizer outside of China, may not provide sufficient protection against infection with Omicron, but three doses are able to neutralize it, Pfizer/BioNTech said in a news release last week. Two doses may still provide protection against severe disease, it added.
China has not released studies on how much its domestic vaccines protect against Omicron, though experts and state media have voiced confidence in curbing the new variant.
More than 1.1 billion Chinese people — or nearly 80% of the population — have been fully inoculated, mostly with inactivated vaccines developed by Sinopharm and Sinovac. But their efficacy was found to be much lower than the mRNA shots, and studies suggest the immunity provided by the Chinese vaccines wanes rapidly.
According to the World Health Organization, Sinovac's vaccine CoronaVac was just 51% effective at preventing symptomatic disease against the original variant, while Sinopharm was 79%. In comparison, the efficacy of mRNA vaccines developed by Pfizer/BioNTech and Moderna were as high as 95%.
And a Hong Kong study published in The Lancet in June found that health workers fully vaccinated with BioNTech's mRNA shot had about 10 times the amount of antibodies than those who received Sinovac's inactivated vaccine.
The limited protection provided by Chinese vaccines is far from enough to satisfy China's ambitious goal of keeping Covid infection at zero within its borders. Over the past few months, authorities have resorted to increasingly stringent measures to curb local outbreaks — often at great economic cost and disruption to daily lives.
But infections have continued to flare up. Last week, more than 130 cases were reported in eastern Zhejiang province, home to the country's key manufacturing and export hubs. And several local authorities across China have called for residents not to travel home for the Lunar Chinese New Year to reduce the spread of the virus.
To improve waning public immunity, Chinese authorities have started rolling out booster shots — but again using the inactivated vaccines.
Some studies have found that mRNA vaccines can generate better immune responses as booster shots. A recent British study, for instance, found that mRNA vaccines made by Pfizer/BioNTech and Moderna provide the biggest boost to antibody levels when given 10-12 weeks after the second dose. Two separate studies from Israel published last week, meanwhile, showed booster doses of Pfizer/BioNTech's vaccine reduced infections tenfold and Covid deaths by 90%.
It's not that Chinese officials are unaware of the advantage of using mRNA vaccines. Last month, Zeng Guang, a former chief epidemiologist at the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention, acknowledged that "real world data showed that using mRNA vaccines or recombinant protein vaccines as a booster dose for inactivated vaccines will achieve better results," citing data from countries such as Turkey, Thailand and Lebanon.
But still, Zeng insisted that using the same technology to deliver booster shots would be safer and more widely accepted by the public.
So why is the Chinese government reluctant to approve Western mRNA vaccines?
Yanzhong Huang, a senior fellow for global health at the Council on Foreign Relations, said politics appears to be the main consideration at play.
China had been a frontrunner in the global vaccine race for much of last year, developing multiple Covid shots using the old-fashioned approach of employing an inactivated whole virus to prompt the body to develop immunity.
It has also sent billions of doses abroad — a campaign that provided vital access to vaccines in developing countries, while also serving to help Beijing promote soft power and project international influence.
"When China developed its own vaccines, they used that to show the technological progress of China. And now if you switch to a foreign-made vaccine, it's tantamount to admitting that you're not as good as other countries in terms of technological capabilities," Huang said.
The Chinese government may also be keen to protect the interests of its domestic vaccine industry, according to Huang. "I'm sure they (existing vaccine makers) would be very resistant to introducing outsiders to this huge market," he said.
While Chinese regulators held off approval for the BioNTech vaccine, domestic companies were given the green light to forge ahead with developing their own mRNA vaccines.
Last month, China's Ministry of Science and Technology approved trials for a domestically developed mRNA vaccine as a booster shot — for adults who have been fully inoculated with inactivated vaccines. It has already conducted clinical trials in countries including Mexico and Indonesia, though the results have yet to be announced.
The vaccine, ARCoVax, was jointly developed by Walvax Biotechnology, Suzhou Abogen Biosciences and the Academy of Military Medical Sciences — a Chinese military research institute. Its production base in southwestern Yunnan province has the capacity to produce 200 million doses annually, according to state media reports, which touted China's success in having "grasped core mRNA vaccine technology."
Several other Chinese companies, including state-owned giant Sinopharm, are also developing mRNA vaccines, Huang said. Beijing will likely want to approve homegrown mRNA vaccines before greenlighting any foreign ones, he added.
But there are signs that Chinese experts are hoping for more cooperation with their Western counterparts.
Over the weekend, Zhong Nanshan, a top Chinese respiratory disease expert and government adviser, urged China to increase exchanges and cooperation in vaccine development with other countries.
"We need to learn about the good things in other countries, such as mRNA (vaccines)," Zhong said at a forum in the southern city of Guangzhou Saturday.
"They've spent years on the research and managed to develop the world's first mRNA (vaccine) in just a few months...We need to learn from their technology in this area," he said. Nectar Gan is China Reporter for CNN International in Hong Kong. She covers the changes taking place in China, and their impact on the world. Steve George is Senior Editor for CNN International in Hong Kong. He oversees coverage from across the Asia-Pacific region, with a special focus on China. A day of commemoration A schoolchild presents a flower at a monument in memory of the victims killed by Japanese soldiers during the Nanjing Massacre in Nanjing, Jiangsu Province. Monday marks the 84th anniversary of the massacre. It is also China's 8th National Memorial Day, set up by the government in 2014 to commemorate the victims. A memorial service held in Nanjing this morning was attended by more than 3,000 people, including senior officials. Online, the homepages of key state media outlets, as well as some e-commerce sites, have also turned black and white. Outcry after a Chinese woman denied divorce is sentenced for killing her husband The sentencing of a Chinese woman to three years in prison for killing her husband has sparked anger online – but not because the sentence came with a three-year reprieve.
According to the court ruling, the woman, surnamed Xu, stabbed her husband, surnamed Zheng, to death with scissors after he attacked her at home last June.
Xu claimed she struck in self-defense, after Zheng barged into her bedroom, drunk, and attempted to strangle her on the floor.
The ruling said Xu had filed for divorce in May 2019, so she could leave her abusive husband, but the court refused to approve her request. It's not known why.
Chinese internet users said the tragedy could have been prevented — if only the court had granted a divorce.
On Weibo, China's version of Twitter, the top-rated comments said the increasing difficulty of obtaining a divorce is why China's marriage rate has been plummeting.
"I would rather have to meet a judge than a coroner. This is another reason not to get married," one comment on Weibo said.
Many worry that the Chinese government's efforts to reduce the country's divorce rate will make it more difficult for victims to leave abusive relationships.
China's divorce rate has fallen by more than 50% since last year, according to the Ministry of Civil Affairs, after the government introduced new policies to discourage couples from parting.
These policies include a "cooling-off" period of 30 days after couples submit their application. They then must wait 30 days before applying again in order to end the marriage.
According to a United Nations survey of 2,120 Chinese people in 2011, 39% of women who had a partner in China said they had suffered domestic violence.
The report also found that many Chinese women have internalized patriarchal values: 71% of women believed that men were the more valuable gender, compared with 52% of male respondents who said the same.
China's birth rate is falling despite the end of the decades-long one-child policy in 2015, and then a further loosening that now allows couples to have up to three children.
The government's struggling to deal with the economic and social issues presented by an aging population. Curtailing divorce rates is seen to be another way to keep couples together — and having children.
— By Cheryl Ho Before the pandemic, Hong Kong was an aviation hub attracting pilots from around the world.
Two years on, pilots at flagship airline Cathay Pacific are so exhausted and depressed from working under one of the world's strictest quarantine regimes that some are reaching a breaking point.
Once known as a premier employer, the airline is now grappling with plummeting morale, a spike in resignations and mounting frustration as staff undergo arduous self-isolation measures, according to two Cathay pilots, who spoke with CNN Business on condition of anonymity for fear of reprisals.
"The morale is all gone. All gone," said the first pilot, who has worked at Cathay for several years. "Everybody's angry."
Hong Kong, along with mainland China, is one of the last places in Asia still adopting a "zero Covid" strategy. While the insistence on stamping out any trace of the virus means the city is largely Covid-free, the policy also means Hong Kong is home to one of the longest quarantines on Earth. And the recent emergence of Omicron, the new coronavirus variant, threatens to further upend aviation and could lead to stricter controls.
In November, FedEx said it would shut down its crew base in Hong Kong and relocate pilots away from the city, citing "pandemic requirements in Hong Kong." More recently, British Airways and Swiss International Airlines also temporarily suspended flights to Hong Kong.
Authorities have defended their quarantine rules, pointing to the success the city has had in keeping out infection. The city of more than 7 million has recorded just over 12,000 total cases and 213 deaths since the start of the pandemic.
But as the global health crisis nears the two-year mark, companies are increasingly under pressure to help ease staff fatigue.
Read more on CNN Business. Michelle Toh is a writer and programming editor for CNN Business based in Hong Kong. MEANWHILE IN CHINA You are receiving this newsletter because you're subscribed to Meanwhile in China.
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