Categories: News

[UPDATE]Khairy: AstraZeneca and Sinovac vaccines not advisable for pregnant women at the moment

[ UPDATE 25/06/2021 18:00 ]: JKJAV is now allowing AstraZeneca, Pfizer and Sinovac vaccines for both pregnant (14-33 weeks) and lactating mothers.

[ UPDATE 26/05/2021 11:00 ]: According to the latest JKJAV guidelines, AstraZeneca is suitable for breastfeeding mothers. However, it is still not recommended for pregnant women.

===

Minister of Science, Technology and Innovation, Khairy Jamaluddin today clarified that the current available data shows that only the Pfizer-BioNTech is suitable for pregnant and breastfeeding mothers.

This, however, does not extend to the Sinovac and AstraZeneca vaccines, with current safety data still limited.

“Based on the advice of the expert working group at MoH (Ministry of Health), for the Pfizer vaccine, it is suitable for pregnant mothers of between 14 weeks to 33 weeks or advisable to postpone their vaccine shots after their pregnancy, this is the actual guidelines.

“However, for breastfeeding moms, it is advisable for them to take Pfizer, for Sinovac it is not advisable for them to take at this time. However, for breastfeeding mothers, the safety data available is limited and any recommendation will be made after consultations  

“For AstraZeneca, it is the same case with the Sinovac vaccine. Pregnant mothers are not advised to take the vaccines and for breastfeeding mothers, available safety data is also limited and any recommendation will be made after consultation.

“This is the current guide that is available and members of the public who have any doubts or questions, please consult your doctors,’’ said Khairy.

On May 14, Bakri MP Yeo Bee Yin had issued a statement, reiterating her call for the government to provide better information on whether it is safe for pregnant women to receive the AstraZeneca and other vaccines in the national vaccine portfolio.

Yeo, who reportedly is herself 17-weeks pregnant at the time, said when she received her vaccine during the first phase of Malaysia’s National COVID-19 Immunisation Programme, she had to do her own research as to whether the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine that she was assigned was safe for her.

In Malaysia’s vaccine portfolio, the national immunisation programme utilises AstraZeneca, Pfizer, Sinovac, CanSinoBio and Sputnik V vaccines. — Malay Mail

[ IMAGE SOURCE ]

Related reading

Recent Posts

Honor Power 2 with 10,080mAh battery: Is this a powerbank or a phone?

Besides the Honor Win, Honor will soon introduce an affordable smartphone that boasts extra long…

10 hours ago

EV Road Tax expiring before end February 2026? Renew now to enjoy RM0 road tax

Besides the tax holiday for fully imported (CBU) EVs, the road tax waiver for EVs…

14 hours ago

Honor Win: This might be the ultimate flagship smartphone to challenge the Poco F8 Ultra

In the final days of 2025, Honor has announced the Win and Win RT (yes,…

17 hours ago

Kuala Kangsar telco tower fire disrupts mobile services for CelcomDigi, Maxis and Unifi Mobile

[ UPDATE 23:54 28 December 2025 ] MCMC has updated that Unifi Mobile was affected…

1 day ago

TNB Electron deploys 240kW DC charger in Jitra, Kedah

In the final days of 2025, TNB Electron isn’t slowing down with its EV charging…

2 days ago

BOMBA: Two parked EVs involved in recent house fire were not charging

Preliminary findings from the Fire and Rescue Department of Malaysia (BOMBA) revealed that the two…

2 days ago

This website uses cookies.