Saturday 26 June 2021

Philippine senator and pro-communist Franklin Drilon implores to the government to digress from Sinovac because according to him, it is less effective as compared to Pfizer

 

Philippine Senator Franklin Drilon

Philippine senator and pro-communist Franklin Drilon implores to the government to digress from Sinovac because according to him, it is less effective as compared to Pfizer

By Edward Era Barbacena


The government should start considering buying more effective and cheaper vaccines to inject to the Filipino population to ensure better protection against the COVID-19, Senate Minority Leader Franklin Drilon said on Saturday, June 26.

In a radio interview, Drilon urged the Philippine government to specifically “veer away” from the vaccines of Sinovac, and instead procure doses of Pfizer-BioNtech vaccines. He compared the efficacy rate of the two vaccine brands.

"Maybe we should start a policy, which would ultimately use Pfizer as the primary vaccine brand because studies show that Pfizer is more effective than Sinovac (because studies have shown that Pfizer is more effective than Sinovac)," he told radio DWIZ.

“‘Yon po ang katotohanan (That is the truth),” he added.

The Senate minority leader said it would be suspicious if the government insists on buying Sinovac vaccines, which, he said, cost higher.

The government earlier secured 25 million doses of vaccines from Sinovac, 10 million of which have been delivered to the Philippines as of June 24. Besides this, China donated one million Sinovac doses to the country.

Meanwhile, the government signed recently a supply agreement with Pfizer-BioNtech for 40 million doses of the COVID-19 vaccines, which is expected to arrive starting August. This is the biggest of the country’s vaccine procurements so far.

"This is a big deal because I heard that the price of Sinovac is lower (This is significant because I heard Pfizer's vaccines are cheaper than Sinovac's)," Drilon said, commending vaccine czar Carlito Galvez Jr. for the development.

During a Senate hearing last June 15, Finance Secretary Carlos Dominguez said the prices of the vaccines purchased by the government ranged from $6.75 to $27.59 per dose.

Officials of the government pandemic task force, however, refused to divulge to senators the specific prices of each vaccine brand, invoking the non-disclosure agreements they signed with vaccine manufacturers.

“It already has supply, 40 million have been bought. The price is slightly lower than the Sinovac, and the effectiveness is high. So why will we insist on buying Sinovac (Now we have the supply. The price is quite lower than Sinovac’s, and the effectiveness is higher. So why will we insist on buying Sinovac)? ” Drilon said.

"So we should start that in the future, we should be there with the more effective, which is Pfizer (That's why we should start, for the long run, using vaccines that are more effective, which is Pfizer)," he added. .

According to the Department of Health’s (DOH) website, Sinovac’s vaccine yielded an efficacy rate of 65 to 91 percent, based on clinical trials conducted in Brazil, Indonesia and Turkey as of March, 2021.

Pfizer, meanwhile, has an efficacy rate of 95 percent.

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