Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

EU pushes to pick up pace of shots

Germany joins other nations in loosening rules on vaccinatio­ns

- By Frank Jordans

BERLIN — Slow off the blocks in the race to immunize its citizens against COVID-19, Germany faces an unfamiliar problem: a glut of vaccines and not enough arms to inject them into.

Like other countries in the European Union, its national vaccine campaign lags far behind that of Israel, Britain and the United States.

This week, the government gave in to growing calls in this country of 83 million to ditch the rulebook that many have blamed for holding Germany back.

“We want to use all flexibilit­y,” Chancellor Angela Merkel said after lengthy negotiatio­ns with state governors in Berlin on adjusting pandemic measures.

Germany will follow the lead of other countries in extending the length of time between first and second shots as much as possible, allowing more people to get the initial dose and cutting the number held back to a minimum.

After initially limiting the AstraZenec­a vaccine to people under 65, an independen­t expert committee is likely to recommend lifting that restrictio­n, Merkel said.

Vaccines that aren’t taken up by those they’re offered to will be made available to others, too, she added.

The measures sweep aside many of the rigid rules German officials have repeated in recent weeks — including Merkel, who said recently that at 66, she would not be taking the AstraZenec­a vaccine because it wasn’t approved for her.

The decision comes as Germany’s stockpile of AstraZenec­a vaccine doses looked set to top 2 million this week due to the restrictio­ns it had imposed, even as many in the country wonder why they aren’t being offered a shot.

Germans watched with morbid fascinatio­n in January as Britain trained an army of volunteers to deliver coronaviru­s shots, then marveled that the U.K. — hit far worse by the pandemic than Germany — managed to vaccinate more than 500,000 people on some days.

The U.S. drive-thru inoculatio­n centers and the COVID-19 shots given out in grocery store pharmacies drew bafflement in Germany — that is, until the country’s own plans for orderly vaccine appointmen­ts at specialize­d centers were overwhelme­d by the demand.

Britain and the United States “had a much more pragmatic approach” to vaccinatio­n, said Hans-Martin von Gaudecker, a professor of economics at the University of Bonn.

“What normally makes German bureaucrac­y stolid and reliable becomes an obstacle in a crisis and costs lives,” he said.

France changed tactics on the AstraZenec­a vaccine earlier this week, allowing some people over 65 to get the shot after initially restrictin­g its use to younger people.

Health Minister Olivier Veran said the shot would soon also be available to people over 50 with health problems that make them more vulnerable.

France, which at nearly 90,000 dead has among the highest coronaviru­s tolls in Europe, had used only 25% of the 1.6 million AstraZenec­a vaccines it has received as of Tuesday.

Data this week from England’s mass vaccinatio­n program showed that both AstraZenec­a and the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine were around 60% effective in preventing symptomati­c COVID-19 in people over 70 after just a single dose.

The analysis released by Public Health England, which hasn’t been peer reviewed yet, also showed that both vaccines were about 80% effective in preventing hospitaliz­ations among people over 80.

Belgium and Italy, too, are loosening their age restrictio­ns for the AstraZenec­a vaccine as they scramble to confront a looming third spike in COVID-19 cases driven by more contagious virus variants.

In Italy, Premier Mario Draghi’s new government ousted the COVID-19 emergency czar this week and put an army general with expertise in logistics and experience in Afghanista­n and Kosovo in charge of the country’s vaccinatio­n program.

Denmark, meanwhile, stands out as an EU vaccinatio­n success story.

The Scandinavi­an nation leads the bloc’s vaccinatio­n tables along with tiny Malta and expects to vaccinate all adults by July — far ahead of the EU goal of 70% of adults vaccinated by September.

France and Spain plan to give just one shot of the two-dose vaccines to some people who have recovered from COVID-19, arguing that recent infections act as partial protection against the coronaviru­s.

Italy, France and the Czech Republic are prioritizi­ng vaccinatio­ns in outbreak hot spots — a measure Germany is also adding to its arsenal.

The number of available vaccines across the EU could swell further next week if the European Medicines Agency follows the lead of the United States in approving the single-dose vaccine made by Johnson & Johnson.

President Joe Biden has indicated the U.S. now expects to take delivery of enough coronaviru­s vaccine for all adults by the end of May — two months earlier than anticipate­d.

Merkel said the pace of Germany’s vaccine campaign would “increase considerab­ly” but refrained from setting a new target.

 ?? MARTIN MEISSNER/AP ?? A man passes a musical theater, which has been turned into a COVID-19 test and vaccinatio­n center, Jan. 25 in Duisburg, Germany.
MARTIN MEISSNER/AP A man passes a musical theater, which has been turned into a COVID-19 test and vaccinatio­n center, Jan. 25 in Duisburg, Germany.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States