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Booster timing cut in half as South Korea struggles with record Covid-19 surge
2021-12-13 00:00:00.0     海峡时报-亚洲     原网页

       

       SEOUL (BLOOMBERG)- South Korea brought forward the timing for Covid-19 booster shots to just three months after the second dose, as one of Asia's most-vaccinated countries grapples with its worst ever virus surge.

       Prime Minister Kim Boo-kyum said Friday (Dec 10) that the booster gap is being shortened on "expert advice" and the move is warranted to "reverse the crisis that our community is facing."

       South Korea has been steadily bringing forward timelines for booster eligibility, from the original six months cut to five and then four months for the elderly.

       The prevailing advice and practice in most countries has been to wait six months to give booster doses.

       Record daily case increases and the emergence of the Omicron variant - there have been 63 confirmed cases in South Korea - is fuelling the urgency to boost, with intensive care unit (ICU) capacity nearing a level where the government may have to impose tighter social distancing measures.

       Some 81 per cent of the population has had two shots, one of the highest rates in the region, while just 10 per cent have received third, or booster, doses.

       South Korea has been recording more than 7,000 new Covid-19 cases a day, and the ranks of the critically ill have also been rising.

       Government officials put the increase at least partially on waning immunity from the vaccines as the first round of shots began in earnest in March with front-line medical workers and then older people.

       About 85 per cent of seriously ill Covid-19 patients right now are over 60 - and half of them are fully vaccinated - the Korea Disease Control & Prevention Agency reported Thursday.

       "Early vaccination is a top priority," PM Kim said Friday, just before the country reported 7,022 new cases, up from around 5,000 a week ago. "I urge people to receive booster shots."

       South Korea has mostly relied on the vaccine from Pfizer and BioNTech in its Covid-19 inoculation roll out, with some, mostly military, receiving the one-shot Johnson & Johnson vaccine. Those people have been advised to get a booster after two months.

       Other highly vaccinated places have also seen virus resurgences, with both Israel and Singapore, where two-dose rates are more than 60 per cent, appearing to beat back recent waves by doubling down on boosters.

       More than 70 per cent of Israelis over 50 had received a third dose as at the end of last month while in Singapore nearly one-in-four people have been boosted, the city-state's Health Minister Ong Ye Kung told Bloomberg News last month.

       There are preliminary signs boosters may be key to warding off Omicron, which appears to be more contagious than previous virus strains.

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       Pfizer and BioNTech said Wednesday that initial lab studies show a third dose of their mRNA vaccine - which has been deployed widely, particularly in the developed world - will likely be needed to ensure high levels of protection from their shot against the variant.

       It's very clear that the Pfizer-BioNTech shot "should be a three-dose vaccine" to deal with Omicron, BioNTech chief executive Ugur Sahin said on a conference call this week.

       It may make sense to give boosters even sooner than now recommended, as early as three months after the first two doses, he said.

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