Oroville Mercury-Register

‘Believe in science’: EU kicks off COVID-19 vaccine campaign

- By Nicole Winfield

ROME » Doctors, nurses and the elderly rolled up their sleeves across the European Union to receive the first doses of the coronaviru­s vaccine Sunday in a symbolic show of unity and moment of hope for a continent confrontin­g its worst health care crisis in a century.

Weeks after the U. S., Canada and Britain began inoculatio­ns with the same vaccine, the 27-nation bloc staged a coordinate­d rollout aimed at projecting a unified message that the shot was safe and Europe’s best chance to emerge from the pandemic.

For health care workers who have been battling the virus with only masks and shields to protect themselves, the vaccines represente­d an emotional relief as the virus continues to kill. But it was also a public chance for them to urge Europe’s 450 million people to get the shots amid continued vaccine and virus skepticism.

“Today I’m here as a citizen, but most of all as a nurse, to represent my category and all the health workers who choose to believe in science,” said Claudia Alivernini, 29, the first person to be inoculated at the Spallanzan­i infectious disease hospital in Rome.

Austrian Chancellor Sebastian Kurz called the vaccine, which was developed in record time, a “gamechange­r.”

“We know

that

today

is not the end of the pandemic, but it is the beginning of the victory,” he said.

Italian virus czar Domenico Arcuri said it was significan­t that Italy’s first doses were administer­ed at Spallanzan­i, where a Chinese couple visiting from Wuhan tested positive in January and became Italy’s first confirmed cases.

Within weeks, northern Lombardy became the epicenter of the outbreak in Europe and a cautionary tale of what happens when even wealthy regions find themselves unprepared for a pandemic. Lombardy still accounts for around a third of the dead in Italy, which has the continent’s worst confirmed virus death toll at nearly 72,000.

“Today is a beautiful, symbolic day: All the citizens of Europe together are starting to get their vaccinatio­ns, the first ray of light after a long night,” Arcuri told reporters.

But he cautioned: “We all

have to continue to be prudent, cautious and responsibl­e. We still have a long road ahead, but finally we see a bit of light.”

The vaccine developed by Germany’s BioNTech and American drugmaker Pfizer started arriving in super- cold containers at EU hospitals on Friday from a factory in Belgium. Each country was only getting a fraction of the doses needed — fewer than 10,000 in the first batches for some countries — with the bigger rollout expected in January when more vaccines become available. All those getting shots Sunday have to come back for a second dose in three weeks.

Ursula von der Leyen, head of the European Union’s Executive Commission, said with additional vaccines in developmen­t, the EU will have more shots than necessary this year and could share its surplus with the western Balkans and Africa.

 ?? PETR DAVID JOSEK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? World War II veteran Emilie Repikova watches as Prime Minister Andrej Babis receives a vaccine against COVID-19 in Prague, Czech Republic, on Sunday.
PETR DAVID JOSEK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS World War II veteran Emilie Repikova watches as Prime Minister Andrej Babis receives a vaccine against COVID-19 in Prague, Czech Republic, on Sunday.
 ?? KATIA CHRISTODOU­LOU — POOL PHOTO ?? Andreas Raounas, 84, receives the Pfizer BioNtech COVID-19 vaccine in Nicosia, Cyprus, on Sunday.
KATIA CHRISTODOU­LOU — POOL PHOTO Andreas Raounas, 84, receives the Pfizer BioNtech COVID-19 vaccine in Nicosia, Cyprus, on Sunday.

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