Authorities in China have ordered an investigation into a vaccination[,væksn'eʃən] scandal['skændl] as panic grows over product safety.
Last week vaccine maker Changsheng Biotechnology['baɪotɛk'nɑlədʒi] Co was found to have falsified(falsify)['fɔlsɪfaɪ] production data for its rabies['rebiz] vaccine.
The firm has been ordered to halt production and recall rabies vaccines.
There has been no evidence of harm from the vaccine, but the scandal has sparked[spɑrk] a huge outcry in China.
Changsheng, which suspended trading in its shares for part of Monday, saw their value drop by 10% on the day.
The shares have slumped 47% since mid-July, when news of the scandal first broke.
On Sunday, Chinese Premier Li Keqiang urged severe punishment for the people involved, saying the incident had "crossed a moral['mɔrəl] line".
"We will resolutely crack down on illegal and criminal acts that endanger the safety of peoples' lives, resolutely punish lawbreakers according to the law, and resolutely and severely criticise dereliction[,dɛrə'lɪkʃən] of duty in supervision," he said in a statement posted on a government website.
Changsheng has apologised, saying that it was "guilty and embarrassed" and would co-operate with drug regulators['regjʊleɪtə]
to carry out a comprehensive internal investigation.
On 15 July, China's State Drug Administration (SDA) announced that Changchun Changsheng had falsified production data during the production of its freeze-dried human rabies vaccine.
According to a report by Xinhua, an official said the company had "fabricated['fæbrɪket] production records and product inspection[ɪn'spɛkʃən] records", as well as "arbitrarily[,ɑrbə'trɛrəli] " during production.
The China Food and Drug Administration (CFDA) said the rabies vaccine had been recalled and that the company would be put under investigation.
Days later, Jilin province authorities announced a 2017 batch of the firm's diptheria, tetanus and pertussis (whooping cough) vaccine - or DTaP - was also substandard.
According to state media outlet CGTN, more than 250,000 doses of DTaP in the batch had already been sold to disease control and prevention centres in eastern China.
The company has now been ordered to pay a fine of 3.4m yuan ($510,000; £387,957).
According to the CFDA, there is no evidence that anyone has been harmed by the vaccine.
Concern has now shifted to the safety of the DTaP vaccine.
The vaccine is subsidised['sʌbsɪdaɪz] by the government and is given to infants['ɪnfənt] across the country.
It is not known how many children have received the vaccine, but there have not been any reports of children falling ill after receiving the inoculation[ɪˌnɒkju'leɪʃn].
The Chinese government has not said what impact the substandard vaccine could have on a person's health.
People are furious.
"Thousands of mothers around the country are worried. Over 200,000 children could be affected. What kind of society am I living in?" asked one person on Weibo.
"My son will be vaccinated next month. I don't know whether or not to let him," said another.
Chinese censors['sɛnsɚ] have also identified the issue as highly sensitive. A widely circulated['sɝkjəlet] article pointing out murky['mɝki] practices in the vaccine industry in China was deleted.
This is not the first time substandard vaccines have been produced in China.
In 2016, an illegal vaccine ring which involved hundreds of people was uncovered.
Some $88m worth of vaccines were found to be inadequately[ɪn'ædəkwɪtli] refrigerated[ri'frɪdʒəretɪd] and were not transported in approved conditions.