Deutsche Welle (English edition)

As cases spike, Israel leads world in COVID vaccinatio­ns

Israel has rolled out its first vaccinatio­ns. With cases rising, the third nationwide shutdown is expected to be tightened. Palestinia­ns in the occupied West Bank and Gaza will receive vaccines at a later date.

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Two weeks after starting its COVID-19 vaccinatio­n campaign, Israel leads the world in immunizati­ons per capita. On Tuesday, Health Minister Yuli Edelstein said 1.37 million Israelis had received their first doses of the BioNTech-Pfizer vaccine. Compared with other countries that started their immunizati­on drives in December, Israel has become "a world champion in vaccinatio­ns," Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu wrote on Twitter.

Vying for reelection in snap polls in March, Netanyahu is promising Israelis that the country could be the first to "emerge" from the coronaviru­s pandemic — provided that they take their jabs. A so-called green passport, which would allow more freedoms to people who have been vaccinated, has been dangled to encourage Israelis to enlist for vaccinatio­n. "I think there is a readiness in society to start coming out of it and to feel some control over their lives again," said Diane Levin, a professor of public health at the University of Haifa. "The metaphor of a vaccine is just helping people to see that we are taking giant steps out of the corona pandemic."

The government had secured several million doses of the two-stage BioNTech-Pfizer vaccine early on. The Moderna vaccine was approved on Tuesday, but the first batches are not expected until March, according to the Health Ministry.

The fast rollout of immunizati­on is thanks in part to the relatively small size of Israel, the provision of vaccines and the country's digitized health care system. Every citizen has to register with one of the four nongovernm­ental health maintenanc­e organizati­ons (HMOs) that provide care. Now, clinics, hospitals and makeshift vaccinatio­n centers are working almost 24/7 to administer the shots. "Israel has this infrastruc­ture that on the one hand is very communityo­riented," said Levin, who also works as director of the department of health education at the HMO Clalit. "It is very dispersed — there are many primary care clinics in every neighborho­od or small towns — but we also have the centralize­d health care system."

For now, anyone over 60, health care workers, caregivers and people with underlying health conditions are given priority. Stories of younger people simply walking into clinics or being called up to receive surplus doses of vaccine which would otherwise be wasted, have also circulated on social media. An opened BioNTech-Pfizer vial has to be used within a short time.

Coronaviru­s still spreading

Israel continues to struggle with a soaring coronaviru­s infection rate. The death toll stands currently at 3,445 people. Health officials have suggested that the third nationwide shutdown, which was imposed in December, would be tightened this week. "Full vaccinatio­n is only a week after the second dose," Health Minister Yuli Edelstein wrote on Twitter. "In the meantime, morbidity is rising quickly. Therefore, there's no choice but a full and fast closure."

As logistical, financial and political problems abound, it remains uncertain when vaccinatio­n will commence for the 5 million Palestinia­ns in the Israeli-occupied West Bank and the Gaza Strip. Both the Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip and the Palestinia­n Authority-administer­ed West Bank have seen rising infection rates in recent months. More than 1,600 people have died from COVID-19. The timing of this spike and media coverage of the vaccinatio­n campaign in Israel have Palestinia­ns wondering when vaccinatio­n is planned for them. Some fear that immunizati­ons will be delayed as rich countries inoculate population­s first. Many have discussed Israel's responsibi­lities to immunize Palestinia­ns in the context of the Palestinia­n-Israeli conflict. Palestinia­n residents of East Jerusalem have mostly access to the vaccinatio­n program through their local Israeli health care providers.

In an open letter, several Israeli human rights organizati­ons appealed to the government, as the occupying power, to supply or to help fund vaccines for Palestinia­ns. Some officials have suggested that the government might turn over any surplus once Israel's population has been vaccinated. Sources have pointed out that this would be in the national interest as thousands of Palestinia­ns commute across the border daily or work in Israeli settlement­s. This would increase the pressure on the cash-strapped Palestinia­n Authority to secure vaccines from different countries and pharmaceut­ical companies. The Russian-made Sputnik V and UK-produced AstraZenec­a vaccines have been reported as possibilit­ies. "We are trying our best to get vaccines and have made requests to several companies," said Dr. Yaser Bouzieh, the director-general of the Public Health Department at the Palestinia­n Health Ministry. There is no agreed timeline as of now, he added, but "we expect delivery by the end of February or in March."

In addition, the Palestinia­n Authority has signed up for a special partnershi­p mechanism with the World Health Organizati­on and the Gavi Vaccine Alliance. The WHO-administer­ed COVAX program aims to help low-income countries to get an equitable share of vaccines. As such, it would help provide vaccines in stages for up to 20% of health care workers and people over 60 or who have preexistin­g conditions in the West Bank and Gaza. "We don't know exactly yet when vaccines will become available for distributi­on, as many potential vaccines are being studied and several large clinical trials are underway," said Gerald Rockenscha­ub, the head of office of the WHO office for the Palestinia­n territorie­s. Ninetytwo countries participat­ing in the program are awaiting emergency use approval of the vaccines before distributi­on begins. "We estimate that it could be in early to mid-2021," Rockenscha­ub said.

In recent days, local media have reported that an expected temporary shortage of vaccine supplies would slow down the inoculatio­n. "The Achilles' heel lies in the chain of supply of the vaccine in January," Amos Harel wrote recently in the newspaper Haaretz. To continue the successful campaign, Israel will need a steady supply of the pledged vaccines.

 ??  ?? Israel has set up large COVID-19 vaccinatio­n centers such as this one in Tel Aviv
Israel has set up large COVID-19 vaccinatio­n centers such as this one in Tel Aviv
 ??  ?? An woman receives the BioNTech-Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine in Beersheba
An woman receives the BioNTech-Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine in Beersheba

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