San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

Germany among EU’s first nations to start immunizati­ons

- By Vanessa Gera and David McHugh

FRANKFURT, Germany — This nation, Hungary and Slovakia began giving out their first coronaviru­s vaccine shots Saturday, only hours after receiving their first shipments, upsetting the European Union’s plans for a coordinate­d rollout today across the bloc’s 27 nations.

“Every day that we wait is one day too many,” said Tobias Krueger, operator of a nursing home where immunizati­ons began in Halberstad­t, in the northeaste­rn German region of Saxony-Anhalt.

The first person at the home to be immunized with the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine was 101-year-old Edith Kwoizalla, the dpa news agency reported.

Krueger said 40 of the home’s 59 residents wanted the immunizati­on shot, along with 10 of around 40 workers. He was among those immunized but added, “I also understand the concerns.”

In Hungary, health care workers were vaccinated

at the Southern Pest Central Hospital in Budapest, while in Slovakia, the first person to receive a jab was a 60-year-old top expert on infectious diseases, Vladimir Krcmery. He was vaccinated along with doctors at the University Hospital in the city of Nitra, in what Health Minister Marek Krajci called a “historic moment.”

The first shipments of the vaccine arrived at hospitals across the EU in super-cold containers late Friday and early Saturday after being sent from a manufactur­ing center in Belgium before Christmas.

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen released a video celebratin­g the vaccine rollout for the bloc of nearly 450 million people, calling it “a touching moment of unity.”

“Today, we start turning the page on a difficult year. The COVID-19 vaccine has been delivered to all EU countries. Vaccinatio­n will begin tomorrow across the EU,” she said.

The rollout marks a moment of hope for a region that includes some of the world’s earliest and worsthit virus hot spots — Italy and Spain — and others such as the Czech Republic that were spared early on, only to see their health care systems near their breaking point in the fall.

In all, EU nations have recorded at least 16 million coronaviru­s infections and more than 336,000 deaths — huge numbers that experts agree still understate the true toll of the pandemic because of missed cases and limited testing.

Still, the rollout helps the bloc project a sense of unity in a complex lifesaving mission after it faced a year of difficulti­es in negotiatin­g a post-Brexit trade deal with Britain. It also brings a sigh of relief for EU politician­s who were frustrated after Britain, Canada and the U.S. began their vaccinatio­n programs this month with the same German-developed shot.

“It’s here, the good news at Christmas,” German Health Minister Jens Spahn told a news conference Saturday. “This vaccine is the decisive key to end this pandemic.… It is the key to getting our lives back.”

The first shipments were limited to just under 10,000 doses in most countries, with the EU’s mass vaccinatio­n programs expected to begin only in January. Each country is deciding on its own who will get the first shots — but they are all putting the most vulnerable first.

“We have been waiting for this for a year now,” Romanian Prime Minister Florin Catu said Saturday after the first vaccines arrived at a military-run storage facility.

 ?? Szilard Koszticsak / AFP via Getty Images ?? Dr. Zsuzsanna Varnai gets a shot at the Southern Pest Central Hospital in Budapest, Hungary.
Szilard Koszticsak / AFP via Getty Images Dr. Zsuzsanna Varnai gets a shot at the Southern Pest Central Hospital in Budapest, Hungary.

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