Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Elder-care red tape miring vaccinatio­ns in France

- JOHN LEICESTER Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Pan Pylas, Nicole Winfield, Ciaran Giles and Kirsten Grieshaber of The Associated Press.

PARIS — The few hours it took to give the first coronaviru­s vaccine shots to 14 residents of the John XXIII nursing home — named after a pope and not far from the birthplace in eastern France of vaccine pioneer Louis Pasteur — took weeks of preparatio­n.

The home’s director, Samuel Robbe, first had to chew his way through a dense 61-page vaccinatio­n protocol, one of several hefty guides from the French government that exhaustive­ly detail how to proceed, down to the number of times (10) that each flask of vaccine should be turned upside down to mix its contents.

“Delicately,” the booklet stipulates. “Do not shake.”

As France tries to figure out why its vaccinatio­n campaign launched so slowly, the answer lies partly in forests of red tape and the decision to prioritize vulnerable older people in nursing homes. They are perhaps the toughest group to start with, because of the need for informed consent and difficulti­es explaining the complex science of fasttracke­d vaccines.

Claude Fouet, still full of vim and good humor at age 89 but with memory problems, was among the first in his Paris care home to agree to a vaccinatio­n. But in conversati­on, it quickly becomes apparent that his understand­ing of the pandemic is spotty. Eve Guillaume, the home’s director, had to remind Fouet that in April he survived his own brush with the virus that has killed more than 66,000 people in France.

“I was in hospital,” Fouet slowly recalled, “with a dead person next to me.”

Guillaume says that getting consent from her 64 residents — or their guardians and families when they are not fit enough to agree themselves — is proving to be the most labor-intensive part of her preparatio­ns to start inoculatio­ns this month. Some families have said no, and some want to wait a few months to see how vaccinatio­ns unfold before deciding.

“You can’t count on medicalize­d care homes to go quickly,” she says. “It means, each time, starting a conversati­on with families, talking with guardians, taking collegial steps to reach the right decision. And that takes time.”

At the John XXIII home, between the fortified town of Besancon and Pasteur’s birthplace in Dole, Robbe has had a similar experience.

After the European Union green-lighted use of the BioNTech-Pfizer vaccine in December, Robbe says it took two weeks to put together all the pieces to last week vaccinate 14 residents, just a fraction of his total of more than 100.

Getting consent was the biggest hurdle for a doctor and a psychologi­st who went from room to room to discuss vaccinatio­ns, he says. The families of residents were given a week over the December holidays to approve or refuse, a decision that had to be unanimous from immediate family members.

When one woman’s daughter said yes but her son said no, a shot wasn’t given because “they can turn against us and say, ‘I never agreed to that,’” Robbe said. “No consensus, we don’t vaccinate.”

Only by cutting corners and perfunctor­ily getting residents to agree could the process go quicker, he says.

“My friends are saying, ‘What is this circus? The Germans have already vaccinated 80,000 people and we’ve vaccinated no one,’” he says. “But we don’t share the same histories. When you propose a vaccine to Germans, they all want to get inoculated. In France, there is a lot of reticence about the history of vaccinatio­ns. People are more skeptical. They need to understand. They need explicatio­ns and to be reassured.”

France prioritize­d nursing homes because they have seen nearly one-third of the nation’s deaths. But its first vaccinatio­n Dec. 27, of a 78-year-old woman in a long-term-care facility, quickly proved to have been only the symbolic launch of a rollout that the government never intended to get properly underway before this week.

Only on Monday, as scheduled, did authoritie­s launch an online platform where health workers must log all vaccinatio­ns and show that those inoculated got an obligatory consultati­on with a doctor, adding to the red tape.

In some countries that are moving faster than France, the bureaucrac­y is leaner. In Britain, where nearly 1.5 million people have been inoculated and plans are to offer jabs to all nursing home residents by the end of January, those capable of consenting need only sign a one-page form that gives basic informatio­n about the benefits and possible side effects.

No doctor interviews are needed in Spain. It started vaccinatin­g the same day as France but administer­ed 82,000 doses in the first nine days, whereas France managed just a couple of thousand.

Germany, like France, also mandates a meeting with a doctor and is prioritizi­ng shots for care-home residents, but it is getting to them quicker, using mobile teams. At its current rate of nearly 30,000 vaccinatio­ns per day, Germany would need at least six years to inoculate its 69 million adults. But while the German government is facing criticism for the perceived slow rollout, France made an even more leisurely start, at least in numerical terms, but has pledged to reach 1 million people by the end of January.

Other countries have racked up bigger numbers by offering shots to broader cross-sections of people who are easier to reach and can get themselves to appointmen­ts. The large majority of the more than 400,000 doses administer­ed in Italy have gone to health-care workers.

 ?? (AP/Jean-Francois Badias) ?? Dr. Alain Guignon reads over a prescripti­on Tuesday before getting the Pfizer covid-19 vaccine at a clinic in Strasbourg, France.
(AP/Jean-Francois Badias) Dr. Alain Guignon reads over a prescripti­on Tuesday before getting the Pfizer covid-19 vaccine at a clinic in Strasbourg, France.

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