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Reuters
Reuters
Business

Brazil delays Chinese vaccine efficacy report, keeps rollout date

FILE PHOTO: Brazil's Sao Paulo state governor, Joao Doria, and director of Instituto Butantan, Dimas Tadeu Covas, hold boxes of the China's Sinovac vaccine against the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) as a cargo plane containing the vaccines arrives at Sao Paulo International Airport in Guarulhos, Brazil November 19, 2020. REUTERS/Amanda Perobelli

Brazil's Sao Paulo state delayed on Monday the release of efficacy data for the COVID-19 vaccine developed by China's Sinovac, tightening the timeframe for regulator approval before a planned roll out on Jan. 25.

Governor Joao Doria said in a radio interview on Monday the data would be released on Dec. 23, eight days later than planned, to allow for a larger sample size and more complete analysis.

Earlier on Monday, João Gabbardo, head of Sao Paulo's COVID-19 response, said the delay would allow the efficacy analysis to include data from a sample including 151 infected people, making it a definitive rather than a preliminary report.

A nurse holds a syringe with SinoVac's coronavirus disease (COVID-19) vaccine before administering it to a volunteer of the Coronavac's trial, at Emilio Ribas Institute, in Sao Paulo, Brazil December 11, 2020. Picture taken December 11, 2020. REUTERS/Amanda Perobelli

Doria's announcement that Sao Paulo will begin public vaccinations on Jan. 25, with the Chinese vaccine it has sourced independently, has angered the federal government of President Jair Bolsonaro, which has yet to set a date for a national immunization campaign.

On Sunday, Supreme Court Justice Ricardo Lewandowski ordered the Health Ministry to clarify within 48 hours when the federal government planned to begin public vaccinations.

Although Brazil has an enviable record for national vaccinations and a public health system well set up for such campaigns, Bolsonaro has repeatedly denied the gravity of the virus and is a vaccine skeptic who has said he will not take a COVID-19 shot.

Psychologist Darianne Lima receives a SinoVac's coronavirus disease (COVID-19) vaccine as she is a volunteer in the Coronavac's trial, at Emilio Ribas Institute, in Sao Paulo, Brazil December 11, 2020. Picture taken December 11, 2020. REUTERS/Amanda Perobelli

Doria's public pressure has also irritated health regulator Anvisa, increasingly run by Bolsonaro allies.

Last week Sao Paulo's biomedical center, the Butantan Institute, began producing the Sinovac vaccine in a fill-and-finish process that will have a capacity of 1 million doses a day.

Despite not having federal approval for the vaccine, the production - at a time when the world is scrambling for shots - has drawn interest from governors across Brazil and countries across Latin America.

Doctor Tatiana Maria Pereira Fernandes receives an injection as she is a volunteer in the Coronavac's trial, SinoVac's coronavirus disease (COVID-19) vaccine at Emilio Ribas Institute, in Sao Paulo, Brazil December 11, 2020. Picture taken December 11, 2020. REUTERS/Amanda Perobelli

(Reporting by Eduardo Simoes, writing by Carolina Mandl and Stephen Eisenhammer, editing by Chris Reese)

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