Few elderly Chinese people report adverse reactions from COVID-19 vaccination
Share - WeChat
BEIJING -- A leading Chinese immunologist on Tuesday said that not many people aged 60 and above have had adverse reactions to COVID-19 vaccination.
Wang Huaqing, chief immunologist at the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention, said the ratio of adverse reactions was lower among the elderly population (aged 60 and above) than among the younger population (aged below 60).
The ratio of severe adverse reactions among the elderly population was similar to other age groups, or below one in 1 million, he added.
Wang said it normally takes one to two weeks to develop antibodies after vaccination, and relatively high levels of antibodies are achieved four weeks after a full vaccination course.
- Ministry to optimize the structure and scale of university enrollment
- Why do China's cultural and creative products go viral?
- Aviation sci-fi park Nantianmen to open in 2027
- Chinese researchers make breakthrough in green cooling technology
- Former head of national forestry and grassland body under investigation
- A new lease of life: Providing dialysis access in rural China
































