Los Angeles Times

French are not keen on vaccines

Prior health scandals and a distrust of the government make them among the most reluctant in the world.

- By Monique El- Faizy El- Faizy is a special correspond­ent.

Health scandals and a distrust of government fuel wariness.

PARIS — When 66- yearold cardiologi­st Jean-Jacques Monsuez slipped one arm out of his blue- andwhite checked shirt and offered it to a nurse holding a syringe filled with the Pfizer COVID- 19 vaccine, he was doing what many in the world plan to do as soon as they have the chance. Just not in France. This may be the land of Louis Pasteur, the scientist renowned for discoverin­g the principles of vaccinatio­n. But its citizens are among the most reluctant in the world to receive the vaccine, ranking France behind most developed countries for inoculatio­n rates so far.

In the f irst six days after the vaccine was rolled out Dec. 27 across Europe in a coordinate­d European Union effort, just 516 people received shots in France — such a low number out of a population of 67 million that it is statistica­lly indistingu­ishable from zero. By contrast, Germany vaccinated more than 200,000 of its residents in the f irst week and Italy more than 100,000.

For Monsuez, the decision to get the injection was an obvious one, both for his safety and that of his family and patients.

“There is a duty. You see one sick person after another,” he said, adding: “It didn’t hurt. I felt the same before and after.”

But many of his compatriot­s appear to not agree. In a poll conducted last month by Ipsos Global Advisor, in conjunctio­n with the World Economic Forum, only 40% of French residents said they intended to get vaccinated.

That put France dead last out of the 15 nations surveyed, in stark contrast to countries such as Britain and the U. S., where 77% and 69% of respondent­s, respective­ly, are eager to be inoculated.

The Gallic hesitancy springs from various factors. Many here cite concern over potential side effects and the speed with which the vaccines were developed.

Distrust of the govern-ment has risen after missteps in its handling of the pandemic and from memories of previous health and vaccine scandals in France.

A cumbersome consent process has bogged down the vaccinatio­n campaign in some instances. And prominent healthcare profession­als have complained of the lack of a clear official strategy for rolling out the vaccines and for convincing people of their value and efficacy.

Over the weekend, President Emmanuel Macron — who survived his own bout with COVID- 19 — promised that the pace of vaccinatio­n would pick up “quickly and powerfully,” and authoritie­s added healthcare workers older than 50 to the list of those eligible for the shot.

Anne Muraro, an art advisor, is in no hurry to join the queue.

“We don’t know the secondary effects,” said Muraro, 50. “It’s too fast. There is not enough hindsight.”

Muraro cited the new messenger RNA technology in the Pfizer- BioNTech vaccine as a cause for unease. The same technology is also used in the Moderna COVID- 19 vaccine, which has not yet been authorized for use in Europe. Many in France worry that the vaccine was rushed to the market in part for the f inancial benefit of big pharmaceut­ical companies.

Although such qualms might be understand­able given the relatively short time the vaccine has been in circulatio­n, they don’t ref lect the medical community’s understand­ing of vaccine developmen­t and approval, said Catherine Hill, a retired epidemiolo­gist in Paris. And the gravity of the public health emergency facing France demands that people step up for the COVID- 19 shots, she said.

The country is one of the hardest- hit in Europe, with 2.7 million confirmed coronaviru­s cases and more than 65,500 deaths, according to a tally by Johns Hopkins University. After two complete lockdowns, residents are under curfew, and bars, restaurant­s and cultural attraction­s remain closed.

Officials have promised to ease these restrictio­ns once the number of new cases drops below 5,000 per day, a target that still seems a long way off.

“This virus is killing 400 people per day in France,” Hill said. “Imagine a big airplane falling out of the sky every day.”

In a television interview over the weekend, French Health Minister Olivier Veran defended the slow pace of vaccinatio­ns and said France would catch up with its European neighbors by the end of the month.

Veran’s management of the coronaviru­s crisis has inspired some mistrust among his compatriot­s. Early on, he said masks were “unnecessar­y” for the public.

Mask- wearing has since become mandatory, and many in France believe his initial counsel against it rose from a supply shortage that the government didn’t want to exacerbate rather than out of sound health policy.

As for vaccinatio­ns, a spokeswoma­n for the health department said it would “not be useful” to start a public informatio­n campaign now because most in France won’t be eligible for a shot until the spring, after priority is given to nursing home residents and to frontline healthcare workers.

The country’s recent history with new vaccines has sparked some public skepticism. In late 2009, the French government ordered far too many doses of the H1N1 f lu vaccine, for which there was little demand, leading to accusation­s of f inancial mismanagem­ent.

More pertinent, there were concerns that the hepatitis B vaccine being given in France in the 1990s was tied to an increase in multiple sclerosis.

Multiple studies examined the link, with varying conclusion­s. In 2002, the World Health Organizati­on affirmed that, “despite a slightly elevated odds ratio observed in the initial studies, none showed a statistica­lly significan­tly elevated risk.” Many here remain unconvince­d.

Edvart Vignot’s sister developed MS after receiving the hepatitis B vaccine, which is partly why he prefers to wait to see what side effects the COVID- 19 vaccine may have before letting anyone stick a needle in his arm. Vignot, who is Muraro’s partner, also wants to hear what scientists not linked to government­s or pharmaceut­ical companies have to say.

“We need other people,” he said, “independen­t experts.”

Also key is winning over family doctors and pharmacist­s, on whom the French lean heavily for advice.

Eliette Gauthier, who lives in a suburb of Bordeaux, said she is still unsure whether she will get vaccinated, largely because her doctor told her he doesn’t yet have enough informatio­n to counsel her one way or the other.

“We don’t have enough informatio­n about the compositio­n” of the shots, the 71year- old retired schoolteac­her said. “I’m going to see what my doctor advises.”

France’s inoculatio­n campaign has been further bogged down by a complex consent process that has mandated pre- vaccinatio­n consultati­ons with patients to ensure their consent. Because the campaign is currently targeting the elderly in retirement homes, some of whom suffer from cognitive issues, the process has been particular­ly laborious.

In the meantime, Muraro and Vignot are taking other preventive measures, such as observing social distancing, wearing masks and taking vitamin D, which some experts believe helps ward off infection. The couple has long since given up shaking hands or greeting friends with kisses on the cheek, as was the French habit until the pandemic broke out.

And both have already had the coronaviru­s, leading them to believe that they probably have some level of immunity for the time being.

Muraro said she would revisit taking the vaccine in the fall, when she will probably be eligible and when the risk of transmissi­on is likely to rise as colder weather spurs people to move indoors.

Frederic Adnet, head of the emergency medicine at the Avicenne hospital in the suburbs north of Paris, believes that most people in France are like Muraro and Vignot: not f lat- out refusing to take the vaccine but adopting a wait- and- see approach.

“When they see it’s effective and safe, opinions will change,” Adnet said, adding that high rates of vaccinatio­n in the U. S. and the U. K. should help boost public confidence here. “I think the French are reasonable, and in two months you will see that we are all yelling that there isn’t enough vaccine.”

 ?? Sameer al- Doumy AFP/ Getty I mages ?? A NURSE ADMINISTER­S a dose of the Pfizer- BioNTech COVID- 19 vaccine Saturday in Paris. In the f irst six days since the treatments were rolled out Dec. 27, just 516 of France’s 67 million people were vaccinated.
Sameer al- Doumy AFP/ Getty I mages A NURSE ADMINISTER­S a dose of the Pfizer- BioNTech COVID- 19 vaccine Saturday in Paris. In the f irst six days since the treatments were rolled out Dec. 27, just 516 of France’s 67 million people were vaccinated.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States