WORLD> Vaccination
40,000 Beijing residents get flu vaccine shots
(Xinhua)
Updated: 2009-09-23 14:42

BEIJING: About 39,000 residents in Beijing had been inoculated with A(H1N1) flu vaccine by Tuesday afternoon, with 14 cases of adverse reaction, an epidemic control expert said here Wednesday.

Liang Xiaofeng, director of the immunization center under the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention, said four of the 14 adverse reactions "may be" related to the vaccines.

"We are still investigating the reasons," Liang said.

Liang also said there was still uncertainty about the safety of vaccination for "sensitive groups" such as pregnant and breastfeeding women.

So far, no deaths from A(H1N1) flu have been reported on the Chinese mainland, but Taiwan has reported 17 deaths of whom two were pregnant women.

Related readings:
40,000 Beijing residents get flu vaccine shots 7 children confirmed with A/H1N1 in Beijing
40,000 Beijing residents get flu vaccine shots 36 pupils in camp infected with H1N1 flu in Beijing
40,000 Beijing residents get flu vaccine shots Beijing schools alerted for A/H1N1 flu
40,000 Beijing residents get flu vaccine shots Home service worker source of Beijing's A(H1N1) mass infection

40,000 Beijing residents get flu vaccine shotsTCM cures H1N1 flu in Beijing

On Monday, more than 10,000 students and performers in Beijing who are to take part in the National Day parade and performances on October 1 received vaccinations, with no adverse reactions, the Beijing Municipal Bureau of Health said Tuesday.

China issued a warrant for mass inoculation with A(H1N1) flu vaccine on September 8 after it approved September 3 vaccine produced by domestic pharmaceutical company Sinovac.

By Monday, more than 13,000 confirmed cases of A(H1N1) flu had been  reported on the Chinese mainland, about 66.4 percent of whom have recovered. Among the new cases, the percentage of those infected within China had increased.