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Too early to determine if additional doses of COVID-19 vaccine needed: Singapore health minister

09:05 AM Jan 08, 2022 | PTI |

Singapore’s Health Minister Ong Ye Kung has said it is ”too early” to determine if further doses of the COVID-19 vaccine would be required.

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”It is too early to answer that question. If we look at an endemic disease like Influenza, people take annual vaccines to protect themselves. This is because the Influenza virus keeps mutating so a new vaccine dose is necessary every year,” he said on Friday.

”So, whether we need future COVID-19 vaccine doses, depends on how fast the protection from three doses wanes, and whether the virus keeps mutating,” Channel News Asia quoted the minister as saying.

Ong noted that Israel was the only country so far to administer a fourth dose for people who are not immunocompromised.

Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett on Tuesday announced that a fourth dose of COVID-19 vaccine boosts antibodies five-fold a week after the shot is administered.

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The country is now administering fourth doses of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine to people over 60, health workers and immunocompromised patients.

In a Facebook post, Ong answered a series of FAQs following the multi-ministry task force press conference earlier this week.

Ong was asked, ”Now that we must get a third dose to get our vaccination status extended, does that mean there will be a fourth, fifth, sixth dose?” In his post, Ong also detailed the recommendation for booster shots for those who have recovered from COVID-19.

”If you have recovered well from an infection, without complications, your immune system would have gone through a strong stimulus. Think of it as a fairly powerful vaccination shot,” he said.

The minister described various combinations of infection with mRNA vaccination doses and whether or not they would allow a person to be considered boosted.

”Rule of thumb, if you are infected while unvaccinated or partially vaccinated, you need two more doses to be considered boosted,” added Ong.

However, there is no rush to get boosted for those who have been infected and then vaccinated, or those who have been infected in between vaccine doses.

”Our experts tell us that under these scenarios, the immunity takes longer to wane, beyond nine months. So, you will get the green light for booster (vaccinated differentiated safe management measures) until our experts advise that it is time to boost.

”But if you want the extra protection, it is safe to get the boost, and our vaccination centres will allow you to do so,” he said.

Meanwhile, the Ministry of Health reported 777 new COVID-19 cases as of noon on Friday, including 396 imported infections.

There were two fatalities, taking the country’s death toll from coronavirus complications to 837.

Friday’s case count was down from the 813 reported on Thursday.

Among the new cases reported on Friday, 366 were in the community and 15 in migrant worker’s dormitories.

Separately, the ministry confirmed 535 new Omicron infections on Friday, comprising 284 imported cases and 251 local cases.

As of Friday, Singapore has recorded 2,83,991 COVID-19 cases since the start of the pandemic.

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