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Private vaccines in China need more regulation – WHO

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VACCINE CONTROVERSY. A child gets a vaccine shot against epidemic encephalitis B at a health station in Hebei, China, April 25, 2015. File photo by Hao Qy/EPA

BEIJING, China – The World Health Organization on Tuesday, March 29, urged tighter regulation of privately sold vaccines in China as a scandal involving out-of-date immunization fuels public outrage in the country's latest safety scare.

The case involves the illegal and improper storage, transport, and sale of tens of millions of dollars' worth of vaccines – many of them expired – reports say.

"The vaccines that are in the private sector need to be managed, stored, handled, distributed, and used in accordance with recognized standards," Lance Rodewald, a WHO expert on immunization, told a briefing.

"This is a very serious situation, it's being taken seriously. We take it seriously. We want to see the root causes identified so that remedies can be provided."

Standard vaccines such as those for polio, hepatitis B, and measles are mandatory for all children in China and supplied by the state, while parents can opt to buy additional immunizations privately such as those for meningitis, influenza, or rotavirus.

China's public vaccination system is fundamentally sound, Rodewald said, adding that the expired private-sector vaccines did not pose a threat to children who received them.

"Parents should be comfortable knowing that their child will not have a toxic reaction," he said, although some children "may need to be revaccinated."

Authorities have already arrested more than 130 suspects in the investigation into the sales. – Rappler.com


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