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O n On Sunday, 27-year-old Mo Li was walking around Weibo when she saw the news: 250,000 defective vaccines had been given to children in the province where she and her husband were raising their only child.
"It was like an explosion in my head," says Mo, who lives in the port city of Weihai, in Shandong Province. "My only thought was" please not my son, please do not please my son, "she says, describing her thoughts while researching the health records of her 17 months. [19659004] The serial number of his vaccination book the batch in question, made by one of the largest vaccine manufacturers in China, Changsheng Biotechnology.Mo looked at his son, Congcong, asleep, and felt awful, then in
"I thought of all the people involved, from the vaccine company to the regulators. They can not be called humans. Like Mo, thousands of parents across China have been quick to find answers this week after their children have received defective vaccines as part of a state-sponsored vaccination program, using Changsheng products. The incident sparked one of the country's largest public calls in years, which authorities and censors have struggled to contain.
Changsheng, a private company based in Jilin Province, is undergoing multiple investigations to inventory a rabies vaccine. and the sale of at least 250,000 non-compliant DPT vaccines – for diphtheria, whooping cough and tetanus – at Shandong health clinics. Senior officials were placed in custody while the Chinese graffiti investigation agency said it would investigate.
Chinese President Xi Jinping, who rarely comments on such cases, promised that the government would "investigate to the end." "It is necessary to quickly release the progress of the investigation and respond effectively to the concerns of the people," he said, according to Chinese state media on Monday.
A recurring problem
There were no reports of injuries caused by defective vaccines and officials promised to children would receive new vaccines. But public confidence has reached a new low: people say they've heard that before.
While China has expanded its immunization program over the past decade, substandard vaccines have been a recurring problem. In 2016, $ 90 million worth of vaccines were found improperly stored in Shandong Province. The previous year, hundreds of children from Henan Province had become ill after receiving expired vaccines. In 2010, a newspaper in Shanxi Province reported that non-refrigerated vaccines killed four children