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Malaysia to stop using Sinovac COVID-19 vaccine after supply ends: Health minister

Yet, some of them kills people more effectively than others. As I said, introduce yourself to all coronavirus. See how this family receives you.

Covid-19 has kill rate less than 0.5% for healthy people younger than 50 and dropping. You are more likely to die in a car accident than to covid. The kill rate is high in Russia but that's mostly due to vodka not to covid itself.

 
Covid-19 has kill rate less than 0.5% for healthy people younger than 50 and dropping. You are more likely to die in a car accident than to covid. The kill rate is high in Russia but that's mostly due to vodka not to covid itself.

Sure. But before contacting Covid-19, nobody knows which part of statistics he will end up with. Currently, you are not even a part of that statistics, let alone your own experience, which is non-existing. So your argument bears little weight.
 
Sure. But before contacting Covid-19, nobody knows which part of statistics he will end up with. Currently, you are not even a part of that statistics, let alone your own experience, which is non-existing. So your argument bears little weight.

Meh. I probably caught covid at least once last year. I don't test. Blood donation analysis suggest at least a third of Americans caught covid in the first few months of 2020. Suggesting covid is very mild. Most people don't have have any symptom.
 
No. Fosun has sufficient ownership in BioNTech to have branding rights.
You don't really need ownership to have branding rights. Haven't you noticed many store-branded items in Canadian grocery stores?
 

KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysia's health ministry on Thursday (Jul 15) said the country will stop administering the COVID-19 vaccine produced by China's Sinovac once its supplies end, as it has a sufficient number of other vaccines for its programme.

Malaysia's inoculation drive will be largely anchored by the Pfizer-BioNTech mRNA vaccine moving forward, health minister Adham Baba told a news conference with other top ministry officials.


The Southeast Asian country has secured about 45 million doses of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine, enough to cover 70 per cent of the population, compared to 16 million doses of Sinovac's shot, the officials said.

"About half of the 16 million have already been distributed, so the rest will be used to cover second doses," Adham said.

"For those who have yet to be vaccinated, they will receive the Pfizer vaccine."

READ: More than 13,000 new COVID-19 cases in Malaysia in 3rd straight day of record numbers


READ: Malaysia government mulls giving 'leeway' to those fully vaccinated against COVID-19: PM Muhyiddin


The government had previously said it had secured 12 million Sinovac doses, as part of a deal which would see state-linked firm Pharmaniaga carrying out a fill-and-finish process on the vaccine for local distribution.

The announcement to stop using Sinovac's inactivated virus vaccine comes amid increasing concern over its efficacy against new and more contagious variants of the coronavirus.

Neighbouring Thailand this week said it would use the AstraZeneca vaccine as a second dose for those who received the Sinovac shot, while Indonesia is considering a booster shot for those who received the two-dose Sinovac course.


READ: Thailand defends COVID-19 vaccine 'mix-and-match' after WHO warning

Other vaccines approved in Malaysia include those of AstraZeneca, China's CanSino Biologic and the Janssen vaccine of Johnson & Johnson.

Malaysia also plans on Friday to announce its decision on whether to add the vaccine of China's Sinopharm, officials said.

With 880,782 cases and 6,613 deaths so far, Malaysia has one of Southeast Asia's highest per-capita infection rates, but also one of its highest inoculation rates, with about 26 per cent of its 32 million population receiving at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine.
Malaysian government has announced that it will make an additional order of 15 million doses of Sinovac vaccines soon.

The title of this thread is thus invalided.
 
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