News On Japan

Japan to approve Moderna vaccine as booster

Dec 16 (NHK) - Japan's health ministry is set to approve the use of the Moderna COVID vaccine for third shots. The country has already started giving the Pfizer vaccine as booster shots.

An expert panel of the ministry on Wednesday agreed that the Moderna vaccine can be administered as the third dose for people in the country aged 18 or older. The ministry will give the green light soon.

Ministry officials say the third dose will be half the amount of the previous shots, based on a clinical trial carried out by Moderna in the United States. It says the trial found that the level of neutralizing antibodies one month after the third dose with the smaller amount was about 70 percent higher than the level one month after the second shot.

The Moderna booster shot can be given six months after the second dose.

The ministry says at least 97.5 million doses of the Moderna vaccine are expected to be available until June next year. It plans to use Moderna doses in the workplace vaccination program from March as well as at medical institutions and large-scale vaccination sites.

The ministry had distributed the Pfizer vaccine to local authorities for vaccine programs at medical institutions. But people who received it for their previous shots may be given the Moderna vaccine as the outlook for the supply of the Pfizer vaccine is unclear.

Source: ANNnewsCH

News On Japan
POPULAR NEWS

Rain affected parts of Japan on Tuesday morning as a low-pressure system and front moved through, bringing heavier downpours in some areas. Skies are expected to clear across much of the country this afternoon. However, yellow sand drifting in from the Asian continent is forecast to spread over a wide area, raising concerns over reduced visibility and worsening health conditions.

Japan's weather agency and the Cabinet Office issued a 'Hokkaido-Sanriku Offshore Subsequent Earthquake Advisory' after an earthquake measuring upper 5 on Japan's seismic intensity scale struck off Sanriku.

JR East has launched a preview version of its new online Shinkansen booking platform, JRE GO, promising reservations in as little as one minute and easier handling of sudden schedule changes.

A bear that had remained in a residential area in central Sendai since early Sunday morning was euthanized last night in an emergency cull. No injuries were reported.

Police investigating the death of an 11-year-old boy whose body was found in a forest in Kyoto Prefecture believe his father moved the remains between several locations over a number of days in an apparent attempt to conceal the crime.

MEDIA CHANNELS
         

MORE Society NEWS

A fire broke out at a four-story apartment building in Okinawa City in the early hours of April 19th, leaving one person dead, with authorities suspecting the victim may be a man in his 70s who served as chairman of a local crime group.

A 37-year-old father arrested over the alleged abandonment of his son's body in a forest in Kyoto Prefecture may have contacted associates to say the child had gone missing before the boy's school informed the family, investigators said.

A 20-year-old university student has been arrested on suspicion of breaking into an apartment in Osaka and stealing cash, with police believing he played a key role in recruiting minors for illegal work schemes.

The annual spring garden party, held at the Akasaka Imperial Gardens in Tokyo, has once again drawn attention to a pressing issue facing Japan's Imperial Household: how to maintain the number of family members as it continues to decline whenever female royals marry.

Japan is often viewed abroad as a country with an unusually visible sexual culture, shaped by adult videos, erotic manga and a wide range of related subcultures. (Japanese Comedian Meshida)

A bear that had remained in a residential area in central Sendai since early Sunday morning was euthanized last night in an emergency cull. No injuries were reported.

The family of a man granted a retrial over a robbery-murder case in Shiga Prefecture has called for revisions to Japan's retrial system, saying he was wrongfully arrested despite having an alibi.

A former elementary school teacher who managed an online group of educators involved in covert filming and image sharing has been sentenced to two years and six months in prison, in a case that has also raised concerns at universities training future teachers.