Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Israel’s vaccine success now pits health, rights

- ILAN BEN ZION

JERUSALEM — After spending much of the past year in lockdown, Tel Aviv makeup artist Artyom Kavnatsky was ready to get back to work. But when he showed up for a recent photo shoot, his employer turned him away. The reason? He had not been vaccinated against the coronaviru­s.

“He didn’t take me because I didn’t get vaccinated,” Kavnatsky said. “It’s discrimina­tion, and it’s not all right.”

The breakneck pace of Israel’s vaccinatio­n drive has made it one of the few countries able to return to much of its pre-pandemic routine. Bars and businesses, hotels and health clubs have all sprung back to life in Israel, where some 80% of the adult population is fully vaccinated and new infections and covid-19 deaths have plummeted.

While Israel provides a glimpse of what may be possible with high immunizati­on rates, it also offers insight into the problems that lie ahead: Workplaces and schools are now grappling with what to do with those who refuse to get vaccinated as the next phase in the pandemic again pits public-health concerns against individual rights and possibly new questions of equity. One case has already ended up in court, and others are expected to follow.

Airlines are already considerin­g if vaccinatio­n, or a recent negative test, might be required for travel, as is the European Union. Some officials in Britain and the United States are exploring if proof of immunizati­on could help large-scale gatherings to return, though there remains significan­t resistance to such measures in the U.S. Whether a shot is necessary to go back to work or class is an even thornier question.

In many countries, the decisions may raise the prospect of further dividing population­s along the lines of wealth and vaccine access. While the vast majority of the 100,000 Palestinia­ns who live in the West Bank and have Israeli work permits have been vaccinated, immunizati­on drives in the West Bank and Gaza have lagged far behind. Many parts of the world have received few, if any, vaccines.

So far, Israel has relied primarily on a series of incentives meant to encourage people to get vaccinated. It has establishe­d a “green pass” for the fully vaccinated whose holders can attend concerts, dine out, go to the gym or travel to popular vacation spots in places like Egypt, Cyprus and Greece. Those who do not have the pass are out of luck.

The system has worked well in areas of leisure and entertainm­ent. But now it is moving into other realms. Health officials have recommende­d barring unvaccinat­ed workers who have not recently tested negative for the virus from schools, elder-care facilities and other high-risk workplaces.

Israel’s health care system also has mandated that all employees — doctors, nurses, administra­tors and support staff alike — receive vaccinatio­ns. If they refuse, they will be transferre­d to jobs that do not involve contact with high-risk patients.

Rights groups have expressed concern that such regulation­s could jeopardize workers’ income.

Similar concerns exist in education. Tel Aviv University, Israel’s largest, has found an uneasy balance for now.

As the university resumes in-person classes, Eyal Zisser, its deputy rector, said only students who are vaccinated can attend. Those who are not can continue to learn remotely.

Even with Israel’s success, hundreds of thousands of people remain unvaccinat­ed — some who are opposed to vaccines in general but many who are hesitant to take a shot that was developed so quickly. U.N., U.S. and European health experts have said the vaccines authorized by Israel are safe and effective.

Kavnatsky, the makeup artist, objects to vaccines and modern medicine more broadly, saying he doesn’t want to put “any needles in my body.” He is not alone. He is one of more than 15,000 members of a Hebrew-language anti-vaccine Facebook group who are critical of what they see as forced immunizati­on by the state.

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