Pakistan says trial of Chinese traditional medicine for COVID-19 successful

Pakistan says trial of Chinese traditional medicine for COVID-19 successful
Volunteers wait to be administered the new Chinese-made vaccine for the coronavirus, at a hospital in Islamabad, Pakistan, on November 25, 2020. (AFP/File)
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Updated 17 January 2022
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Pakistan says trial of Chinese traditional medicine for COVID-19 successful

Pakistan says trial of Chinese traditional medicine for COVID-19 successful
  • Trials conducted on 300 patients would work on mild to moderate cases, principal investigator says
  • The medicine, Jinhua Qinggan Granules (JHQG), is already being used for COVID-19 treatment in China

KARACHI: Pakistani health authorities on Monday announced the completion of a successful clinical trial of Chinese traditional herbal medicine for treating COVID-19, as the South Asian nation enters a fifth wave of the pandemic driven by the omicron variant. 
The Chinese medicine, Jinhua Qinggan Granules (JHQG) manufactured by Juxiechang (Beijing) pharmaceutical Co. Ltd, is already being used in treatment of COVID-19 patients in China. 
“Since it was tried on patients with different variants of COVID-19, we expect it to be effective on omicron as on other variants,” Professor Iqbal Chaudhry, director of the International Center for Chemical and Biological Science (ICCBS) where trials were conducted, told reporters. 




Packs of Chinese traditional herbal medicine Jinhua Qinggan Granules (JHQG) for the treatment of coronavirus (COVID-19) disease are displayed during a ceremony after completion of clinical trial on the efficacy and safety, at the International Centre for Chemical and Biological Sciences of Karachi University in Karachi, Pakistan, on January 17, 2022. (REUTERS)

The trials were conducted on 300 patients who were treated at home, and would work on mild to moderate COVID-19 cases, Dr. Raza Shah, principal investigator in the trials, told reporters, adding that the efficacy rate was around 82.67 percent. 
The trials were approved by the Drug Regulatory Authority Pakistan. 
Pakistan reported 4,340 COVID-19 cases on Monday, the highest recorded in a 24-hour period in three months. Karachi, the country’s largest city, recorded a positivity rate — the percentage of tests coming back positive — of 39.39 percent at the weekend, the highest so far. 
“In the last seven days, COVID cases in Pakistan have increased by 170 percent while deaths have also increased by 62 percent,” the National Command Operation Center (NCOC), which is overseeing the pandemic response, said in a tweet on Monday.