Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Russia’s slow inoculatio­n drive picks up speed

- By Daria Litvinova

IKHALA, Russia — Maria Piparinen and other elderly residents of Ikhala were relieved when they heard that doctors were finally bringing a few doses of the coronaviru­s vaccine to their remote, snowy village in the Russian region of Karelia, near the border with Finland.

Otherwise, the 75-yearold said she would have had to hire a car to take her 6 miles to the town of Lakhdenpok­hya, because the bus no longer runs there.

And besides, “I called the clinic in Lakhdenpok­hya, but they told me (all the slots in) February were booked already,” Piparinen said.

The village of wooden houses — carved out of a dense forest of fir trees 12 miles from the Finnish border and 60 miles north of St. Petersburg — is one of several in the Karelia region where Russia’s vaccinatio­n campaign has arrived in recent weeks.

More than 18,000 people have gotten their first dose of the Sputnik V vaccine in the region of 600,000 that was hit hard by COVID-19.

At one point in December, Karelia recorded a daily average of 75.7 cases per 100,000 people, the highest rate in Russia, which had been averaging 18.8 recorded cases per 100,000.

“When you watch TV and see how people are suffering, you don’t want that. You want to live a little longer,” said 74-year-old Galina Shilova, one of Ikhala’s nearly 700 residents.

Some of those getting the shots last week at the makeshift clinic had to make their way cautiously along snowy footpaths.

The goal is to vaccinate 290,000 people, or 60% of the region’s adults, by summer, said Karelia Deputy Health Minister Galina Matveyeva.

Russia took pride in being the first country to approve a coronaviru­s vaccine, although it faced criticism for doing it before completing the advanced testing necessary to ensure Sputnik V’s safety and effectiven­ess.

It began vaccinatio­ns in December, another global first, but now it lags behind a dozen nations that have been using vaccines developed in the West and China.

Russian authoritie­s don’t regularly release data on vaccinatio­n rates, but the number who have gotten at least the first shot appears to be somewhere between 2 million and 3.2 million.

On Feb. 10, Denis Logunov, deputy director of the Gamaleya Center that developed Sputnik V, said 2.2 million Russians, or less than 2%, had received their first dose of the two-shot vaccine and more than 1.7 million had gotten both shots.

An analysis of regional media reports by The Associated Press found that some 3.2 million had gotten their first shot as of last week.

That compares with about 44 million people in the U.S., or about 13.2%, who have gotten their first shot, and 19.4 million who have gotten both in a campaign that has had its own difficulti­es.

Russia’s slow rollout has raised questions in the West as more countries have agreed to buy millions of doses of Sputnik V.

The Russian Direct Investment Fund that bankrolled the vaccine’s developmen­t and is marketing it abroad didn’t respond to a request for comment on how many doses are going to other countries.

Media reports indicate about 20 countries ordered a total of over 200 million doses, said Elena Subbotina, consultant with Central & Eastern European Team of CBPartners, a global health care strategy consulting firm.

Last week, an African Union-created task force

said Russia has offered 300 million doses of Sputnik V.

“I must say we still wonder why Russia is offering theoretica­lly millions and millions of doses while not sufficient­ly progressin­g in vaccinatin­g their own people,” said European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Russia’s vaccinatio­n campaign is going at “normal” rates.

The drive has picked up speed but is still rather slow, said Alexander Dragan, an independen­t data analyst who monitors regional vaccinatio­n rates.

“Between the beginning of January and now, the vaccinatio­n rate has increased 10 times. During the New Year holidays, some 13,000 people a day were being vaccinated, and over the past nine days, I estimate that shots were being given to 135,000-145,000 people daily,” Dragan said. “In absolute numbers, it looks impressive ... but in proportion­ate numbers, it’s very

modest, because one should keep in mind Russia’s population of 146 million.”

Dragan’s estimate suggests the vaccinatio­n rate last week was about one-fourth of that in the United States.

Health Minister Mikhail Murashko has announced plans to vaccinate 60% of the population by the end of June.

Experts and the media point to limited supply, distributi­on logistics complicate­d by its having to be stored and transporte­d at minus -0.4 degrees Fahrenheit, and hesitance among those wary of its rushed approval.

“It’s supply-side or demand-side issues, and my guess is, it’s a little of both,” said Judy Twigg, a professor of political science at Virginia Commonweal­th University specializi­ng in global health.

Logunov, of the Gamaleya Center, said 7 million doses have been released for domestic use, another 1 million are expected by the end of February, and 10 million are planned to be produced in March.

The Health Ministry allocates the doses. While Muscovites can get vaccinated on the day they decide to do it, long waits have been reported in other regions.

In Karelia’s capital of Petrozavod­sk, patients said they waited more than two weeks. Residents of Sortavala, a town 185 miles west of Petrozavod­sk, complained on social media in early February about being unable to sign up.

Regulation­s state that vaccines must be administer­ed by a team including a physician to examine recipients and offer help in case of an adverse reaction — something that can also constrain the drive because of a limited number of available physicians.

Karelia has received 23,392 doses in total, 4,200 of which arrived last week. Matveyeva, the deputy health minister, said the region can store about 30,000 doses at once at minus-0.4 degrees, limiting how many vaccines they can receive.

For last week, 250 doses were allocated to the Sortavala district and the neighborin­g district, an area that is home to 42,000 people, including those in Ikhala. A team led by Dr. Alexander Romanov, Sortavala hospital head, brought 10 doses to Ikhala.

When the outbreak surged in the fall, it didn’t spare Ikhala, where 60 infections were registered.

“November, December, January — it was something,” said Tatyana Tikhonova, the village paramedic.

 ?? DMITRI LOVETSKY/AP ?? A medical worker administer­s a shot of the Sputnik V coronaviru­s vaccine Feb. 16 to Maria Piparinen at a rural medical post in the village of Ikhala in Russia’s Karelia region. Karelia has received 23,392 doses in total.
DMITRI LOVETSKY/AP A medical worker administer­s a shot of the Sputnik V coronaviru­s vaccine Feb. 16 to Maria Piparinen at a rural medical post in the village of Ikhala in Russia’s Karelia region. Karelia has received 23,392 doses in total.

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