Waimai Drivers, F&B Workers Begin the Vaccination Process
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In the first few days of the new year, more than 70,000 Beijingers received their first dose of the Sinovac vaccine. The vast majority of these recipients are essential workers and those who fall into nine other categories.
Your average day-to-day Beijinger is unlikely to come in contact with most of these personnel, but now that Beijing has moved onto the second line of recipients there is one group among them with whom you’re bound to come in contact on a regular, if not daily basis: food and beverage industry workers and waimai delivery drivers.JSS delivery drivers on their way to the hospital to receive their first dose of the vaccine
Waimai drivers began the inoculation process within the past couple of days. A representative of JSS delivery told the Beijinger that they have become the first food delivery platform to have all of their drivers receive the initial dose of the vaccine.
“We feel it’s a great service for both our customers and our staff,” says the representative, adding that the company has already informed their customers of the vaccination via their WeChat groups and received overwhelmingly positive feedback.advertisement
The Sinovac vaccine, which is estimated to have an efficacy rate of more than 70 percent, is administered in two doses, the second coming between 14 and 28 days after the first. Recipients then need an additional two weeks to develop immunity, so the personnel receiving the vaccine now should be fully inoculated from COVID-19 within 42 days. In the meantime, the government is administering weekly nucleic acid tests to workers in at-risk locations.
READ: A Semi-Comprehensive List of Where You Can Get a COVID-19 Test in Beijing
Images: Yunnan Supervision Committee, JSS
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