Categories: News

Dr Noor Hisham: More data from Pfizer needed before COVID-19 vaccine can be used in Malaysia

Minister of Science, Technology, and Innovation Khairy Jamaluddin has revealed yesterday that the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine has received conditional registration approval by the National Pharmaceutical Regulatory Agency (NPRA). According to his tweet, the vaccine can be used in Malaysia.

A couple of hours later, Health D-G, Dr Noor Hisham Abdullah, has mentioned that the pharmaceutical company is still required to furnish additional vital data within the stipulated time before it is approved for use in Malaysia. Pfizer had submitted its application for the registration on the 15th December 2020.

The Health Ministry has mentioned previously that it will take roughly 3 to 4 months to register a COVID-19 vaccine with the NPRA. All pharmaceutical products must be registered with the Drug Control Authority (DCA) following a quality, safety and efficacy evaluation process by the NRPA.

The first batch of Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccines are expected to arrive next month and it will be prioritised for frontliners as well as high-risk individuals especially those who have non-communicable diseases (NCD) and chronic respiratory diseases.

The vaccines will be administered for free to all Malaysians. To convince Malaysians that the vaccines are safe, Prime Minister Muhyiddin Yassin has volunteered to be among the first to receive the jab.

As announced by Health Minister Dr Adham Baba, 1 million vaccines will arrive in February 2021 under Phase 2 and an additional 6.2 million vaccines will arrive in April and May 2021. Most COVID-19 vaccines including Pfizer, AstraZeneca and Sinovac require two doses. Malaysia aims to secure enough vaccines from various pharmaceutical firms to cover 82.8% of the population. However, the vaccine will only be administered to those who are aged 18 years and above as there are no clinical trials yet on children.

The Pfizer vaccine requires to be refrigerated between -80°C and -60°C and the government will spend RM6.7 million to purchase 55 special freezers that will be placed in urban areas.

The COVID-19 vaccination will be offered voluntarily and it won’t be made mandatory. Khairy has mentioned that Malaysians will need to provide their consent to be vaccinated. Those who wish to get the COVID-19 vaccine may sign up through the MySejahtera app soon.

[ SOURCE , IMAGE SOURCE ]

Related reading

Recent Posts

Gentari x MBPP turn on 120kW DC Charger near Maybank Tanjung Bungah

Gentari x MBPP continue to deploy more street-level EV chargers on the Island and the…

33 minutes ago

Proton S70 revealed as the official Madani Taxi: A modern makeover for Malaysia’s taxi

Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim has revealed the Proton S70 1.5T i-GT Premium which was launched…

5 hours ago

Not just for EVs: Malaysian taxis are getting the new JPJePlate

Two years ago, the Road Transport Department (JPJ) introduced the JPJePlate which sets the new…

10 hours ago

Why some ATMs are still charging RM1 for cash withdrawals despite the fee waiver

Effective 1st July 2026, Malaysians can make unlimited ATM cash withdrawals for free at over…

11 hours ago

JomCharge x DBKL turn on new 100kW DC Charger at Kuchai lama

JomCharge x DBKL continue to turn on more street-level EV charging locations in Kuchai Lama…

15 hours ago

Porsche Taycan and Macan EV prices surge in Malaysia: Up to RM410k higher

Porsche has recently updated the price of its EV lineup in Malaysia, and the changes…

1 day ago

This website uses cookies.