South African health regulator approves J&J COVID-19 boosters
JOHANNESBURG: South Africa's health regulator on Thursday
(Dec 23) approved the use of Johnson & Johnson vaccine for a second dose or
booster, paving the way for the shot widely used in South Africa to shore up
protection against the Omicron variant.
The country already announced in December that it was
preparing to offer people booster doses of both the Pfizer and J&J shots,
but it did not specify when J&J boosters would be available.
The South African Health Products Authority (SAPHRA) said in
a statement on Thursday that it had approved J&J shots for use as a second
dose or booster at least two months after the completion of the person's
primary vaccination, with either J&J's single-shot course or another
approved mRNA COVID-19 vaccine.
J&J boosters have so far only been available for health
workers, while Pfizer boosters are set to be introduced from January for people
who had their second dose six months ago or more.
South Africa has relied heavily on the two companies' shots
in its vaccination campaign, which had given 44 per cent of its adult
population at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine earlier this month.
That is more than many African countries, but well short of the government's year-end target.
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