That means it hasn't met the typical safety and efficacy standard for vaccine development - but China has still cleared it for emergency use, saying it had support from the WHO."And I think I was the one who was the test subject, the one who was treated like a little mouse."
"But some doctors and some teachers refused to make the vaccination. They think it's dangerous because they think they are being tested,"she told Sky News.Starting in July, thousands of employees from Chinese state-owned enterprises have already received the vaccine ahead of foreign travel. It is not quite a full roll-out yet. One health clinic in Jiaxing, a city in the same province which has advertised the vaccine, told Sky News it was waiting for doses to arrive but that people could sign up in the meantime.