COVID-19 vaccine: Answers to frequently asked questions

chinadaily.com.cn | Updated:Jan 12, 2021

China has started offering free shots of COVID-19\r\n vaccines among some key groups of individuals, and will expand the \r\nrange to others as more vaccines become available. Here we've provided \r\nanswers to commonly asked questions about COVID-19 vaccines.

1.

Q: What people are in the priority groups for COVID-19 vaccination?

A: Vaccines will be given first to priority groups with a high potential risk of infection including:

Inspection and quarantine staff handling cold-chain products

Workers loading, unloading and transporting cargo at ports

People whose work is related to transportation

Health workers

Staff at border ports

Public security officers, firefighters and community workers

Workers at water, electricity, heating and gas utility companies

Those who work in logistics, elderly care, sanitation and cremation and burial industries

Those who will work or study in countries and regions with a medium- or high-risk of exposure to the virus

2.

Q: Who should delay getting vaccinated?

A: Vaccination should be postponed for the following groups of people:

Those who are younger than 18 or older than 59

People allergic to any component of the vaccine or those with severe allergies to other vaccines

People suffering from fever, acute illness, severe chronic diseases or in the acute phase of chronic diseases

Pregnant women, lactating women or women have plan to have a child within three months of vaccination

Those with a history or family history of convulsions, epilepsy, \r\nencephalopathy or psychiatric disorders; those with uncontrolled \r\nepilepsy or other progressive neurological disorders; and those with a \r\nhistory of Guillain-Barre syndrome

Those who have been diagnosed with a congenital or acquired immune \r\ndeficiency, HIV infection, lymphoma, leukemia or other autoimmune \r\ndiseases

Those suffer from or are suspected to have severe respiratory \r\ndiseases, severe cardiovascular diseases, liver and kidney diseases, \r\nmalignant tumors

Those who use immunomodulators such as anticancer drugs

Those who have been infected with the novel coronavirus

Those considered not suitable for vaccination according to clinicians or vaccination workers

Any other individuals specified in the manual of the vaccine

3.

Q: What types of COVID-19 vaccines are currently available? Which one is the best?

A: There are hundreds of institutions developing \r\nCOVID-19 vaccines. There are many different types according to the \r\ntechnology being used, such as inactivated vaccines, recombinant \r\nvaccines, vector vaccines and nucleic acid vaccines.

At present there is no evidence to conclude which vaccine is better. \r\nAll COVID-19 vaccines approved for use are effective at preventing the \r\ndisease. The vaccines given to priority groups in China are inactivated \r\nvaccines.

4.

Q: How do you get vaccinated and how many doses are needed?

A: Two doses of the vaccine are recommended for \r\nimmunization, within an interval of at least 14 days. The vaccine is \r\ninjected into the deltoid muscle in the upper arm.

5.

Q: If I miss or have to delay the second vaccine dose, what should I do?

A: No clinical research data is available regarding \r\ndifferent immunization procedures, so the maximum interval between the \r\ntwo shots is currently not known. You should complete the vaccine doses \r\nas soon as possible if you have deviated from the recommended schedule.

6.

Q: Can I use different COVID-19 vaccines interchangeably for the two shots?

A: It is recommended that you use vaccines produced by the same manufacturer to complete the series.

7.

Q: How long does it take to produce antibodies after vaccination?

A: Clinical studies have shown that antibody \r\nproduction generally begins seven days after the first dose of the \r\ninactivated COVID-19 vaccine, and the antibody positivity rate is about \r\n60-90 percent in 14-28 days. The antibody positivity rate reaches more \r\nthan 90 percent 28 days after the second dose of vaccine and provides \r\ncontinuous protection.

8.

Q: Do I need to check if I have generated antibodies? If test\r\n results are negative, do I have to restart the vaccination procedure \r\nfrom the first shot?

A: There's no need to check if you have generated \r\nantibodies unless there is a special requirement for it. For those who \r\nvoluntarily take an antibody test and receive negative results, it's \r\nalso not recommended to restart the vaccination procedure.

9.

Q: Can I take the COVID-19 vaccine with other vaccines, such as the HPV vaccine, flu vaccine or rabies vaccine?

A: The COVID-19 vaccine is a new vaccine, so it is \r\nnot recommended that you get a COVID-19 vaccine at the same time as any \r\nother vaccine.

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