South Korea will ensure coronavirus vaccines for 60% of the population: PM Chung



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SEOUL: South Korea will ensure early supply of the new coronavirus vaccines for 30 million people, or 60 percent of its population, Prime Minister Chung Sye-kyun said at a cabinet meeting on Tuesday (September 14). ).

While authorities would like to vaccinate the country’s total population of 52 million, uncertainties surrounding the vaccine’s safety, efficacy and development were limiting South Korean investment, Chung said.

READ: COVID-19: South Korea eases social distancing for two weeks before major holidays

Chung said the government will negotiate with relevant international organizations and vaccine manufacturers to ensure the early supply of COVID-19 vaccines and will buy more as development progresses.

In August, South Korea said it planned to join the COVAX facility, a global COVID-19 vaccine allocation plan co-led by the World Health Organization (WHO) that aims to help buy and distribute injections fairly. .

South Korea will buy 20 million doses of COVAX vaccines, available to 10 million people, and 40 million doses from private pharmacists, health authorities said in a statement.

South Korea’s SK Bioscience agreed in July to manufacture AstraZeneca’s experimental vaccine, which has shown promise against coronavirus, to help the British company build global supplies.

Novavax Inc said separately last month that SK Bioscience, a unit of SK Chemicals, would manufacture a component of the US drug developer’s experimental coronavirus vaccine in a bid to increase its supply.

The Korea Disease Prevention and Control Agency reported 106 new coronavirus cases as of midnight Monday, bringing the total number of infections to 22,391 and total deaths from COVID-19 to 367.

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