Argentina has signed a production agreement for the vaccine, which has been added to an emergency register, the national medicines administration said.
Argentina has followed Britain to become only the second country to authorize the
coronavirus vaccine developed by drug firm
AstraZeneca and Oxford University, the government said on Wednesday.
Argentina has signed a production agreement for the
vaccine, which has been added to an emergency register for one year, the national medicines administration said.
"The product presents an acceptable benefit-risk balance," said the administration in a statement.
The
vaccine can be stored, transported and handled at normal refrigerated conditions, and is therefore cheaper and easier to administer than other jabs developed by
Pfizer/
BioNTech and Moderna that require freezing.
Argentina and Mexico have an agreement to produce the
vaccine and distribute it in Latin America.
It's the third
Covid vaccine to receive approval in Argentina after the
Pfizer/
BioNTech and Russian Sputnik V immunizations.
The South American country began administering Sputnik V, which has come under fire for being rolled out despite a lack of clinical trials, on Tuesday.
Argentina has acquired 300,000 doses of Sputnik V with another 19 million due to arrive in January and February.
However, the government has yet to come to an agreement with US pharmaceutical giant
Pfizer over the acquisition of its
vaccine.
Argentina has recorded more than 43,000 deaths and over 1.6 million cases of the
coronavirus amongst its 44 million population.
President Alberto Fernandez's government has said it intends to purchase 51 million
vaccine doses in total.