The Philippines kicked off its Covid vaccination programme on Monday, with health workers the first to be inoculated in a delayed campaign as the country tries to secure supplies to address one of Asia’s most stubborn coronavirus epidemics.
Healthcare workers in six government hospitals in the capital region received Sinovac Biotech vaccines donated by China on Sunday, the only doses the Philippines has received so far.
“You truly are the heroes during this time of the pandemic so it is just right that you be the first in line to receive the vaccines,” Presidential Spokesman Harry Roque told health workers.
A protester holds a sign calling for free and safe COVID-19 vaccines during a rally outside the Lung Center of the Philippines in Quezon City, Metro Manila, Philippines. EPA-EFE/ROLEX DELA PENA
The Philippines has reported 576,352 Covid cases overall, including infections with the more infectious British coronavirus variant. It has recorded 12,318 deaths.
It aims this year to inoculate 70 million of its 108 million people to achieve herd immunity and reopen an economy that in 2020 saw its worst contraction on record, due largely to tight restrictions on movement in place since mid-March.
Main Photo: Filipino doctor Eileen Aniceto receives a commemorative pin after receiving the first dose of the Sinovac COVID-19 vaccine at the Lung Center of the Philippines in Quezon City, Metro Manila, Philippines. EPA-EFE/ROLEX DELA PENA