Brazilian health regulator Anvisa on Sunday approved emergency use of Covid-19 vaccines from China’s Sinovac Biotech and Britain’s AstraZeneca, kicking off immunisations as the pandemic enters a deadly second wave.
Minutes after Anvisa’s board voted unanimously to approve both vaccines, Monica Calazans, a 54-year-old nurse in Sao Paulo, became the first person to be inoculated in Brazil, receiving the Chinese vaccine known as CoronaVac.
President Jair Bolsonaro, a coronavirus sceptic who has refused to take a vaccine himself, has been under growing pressure to start inoculations in Brazil, which has lost more than 209,000 to Covid-19 – the worst death toll outside the United States.
However, delays with vaccine shipments and testing results have held up vaccinations in the country, once a global leader in mass immunisations and now a regional laggard after peers such as Chile and Mexico started giving shots last month.
Bolsonaro’s government was planning to kick off a national immunisation programme this week but is still waiting on shipments of the AstraZeneca vaccine at the centre of its plans. That has added to public frustration and offered a political rival the chance to upstage the right-wing president.
Sao Paulo Governor Joao Doria, who oversees the Butantan biomedical centre that partnered with Sinovac in Brazil, said widespread vaccinations could start immediately.
“I have determined that as soon as Anvisa approves the emergency use of the Butantan vaccine, the Butantan Institute will immediately deliver the vaccines to the Health Ministry to be distributed to SP (Sao Paulo), DF (Federal District) and all Brazilian states,” Doria tweeted just before the deciding vote was cast by Anvisa’s board.
Health Minister Eduardo Pazuello told a news conference that the rush to start vaccinating immediately was an illegal “marketing ploy”, and the government would start distributing the vaccines to states on Monday morning. Brazil could eventually vaccinate 1 million people per day, he said.
Bolsonaro, for whom Doria is a potential centre-right rival to his 2022 re-election efforts, has taunted the governor over CoronaVac’s disappointing 50 per cent efficacy in Brazilian trials, but the federal health ministry has agreed to acquire and distribute the shot for the national immunisation drive.
Adding to urgency for vaccinations, a second wave of the outbreak in Brazil is snowballing as the country confronts a new, potentially more contagious variant of the coronavirus that originated in Amazonas and prompted Britain and Italy to bar entry to Brazilians.

Source: Reuters
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