Texarkana Gazette

Poland leaders seek to address vaccine hesitancy

- VANESSA GERA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

WARSAW, Poland — As 83-year-old Hanna Zientara endured subfreezin­g temperatur­es to get a covid-19 vaccine booster shot in Warsaw, her 30-year-old grandson was starting a Canary Islands vacation while unvaccinat­ed and refusing his grandmothe­r’s repeated pleas to get vaccinated.

“I am worried about him, but I have no influence over him. None,” Zientara said. “He has many doctor friends who aren’t getting vaccinated, and he says if they aren’t getting vaccinated, then he doesn’t have to.”

Poland and several other countries in Central and Eastern Europe are battling their latest surges of coronaviru­s cases and deaths while continuing to record much lower vaccinatio­ns rates than in Western Europe.

In Russia, more than 1,200 people with covid-19 died every day for most of November and on several days in December. Ukraine, which is recording hundreds of virus deaths a day, is emerging from its deadliest period of the pandemic.

Meanwhile, the mortality rate in Poland, while lower than it was than in the spring, recently climbed to more than 500 deaths per day. On Wednesday, the country reported 592 more virus deaths.

Intensive care units are full, and doctors report that more and more children require hospitaliz­ation, including some who went through covid-19 without symptoms but then suffered strokes.

The situation has created a dilemma for Poland’s government, which has urged citizens to get vaccinated but clearly worries about alienating voters who oppose vaccine mandates or any restrictio­ns on economic life.

Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki received his vaccine booster publicly last week and urged others to get their shots to protect older adults at Christmas. He noted that some family gatherings during the pandemic have “ended tragically, ended with the departure of our grandfathe­rs, grandmothe­rs.”

To promote vaccines, Health Minister Adam Niedzielsk­i pointed out Monday that of the 1,085 people under 44 who died with covid-19 so far this year in Poland, only 3% were fully vaccinated. “This black statistic could be different thanks to vaccinatio­ns,” he said.

With a health system already stretched to its limits, Poland’s government announced Tuesday that it is requiring doctors, other medical personnel, teachers and uniformed workers like police officers, members of the military and firefighte­rs to be vaccinated by March 1.

Critics of the right-wing government denounced the step as too little too late, while a far-right party, Confederat­ion, slammed it as discrimina­ting against unvaccinat­ed Poles.

The resistance to vaccines in Eastern Europe is rooted in distrust of pharmaceut­ical companies and government authoritie­s, while disinforma­tion also appears to be playing a role.

As worried grandmothe­r Zientara got a Pfizer vaccine booster dose on Tuesday, the Polish government reported 504 deaths.

Sitting nearby was Andrzej Wiazecki, a 56-year-old who needed no convincing to come in for a booster shot. He said he has several friends hospitaliz­ed with covid-19, including

“I am worried about him, but I have no influence over him. None. He has many doctor friends who aren’t getting vaccinated, and he says if they aren’t getting vaccinated, then he doesn’t have to.” — Hanna Zientara, an 83-year-old Pole who is concerned because her 30-year-old grandson refuses to be vaccinated against covid-19

a previously healthy and athletic 32-year-old who is fighting for his life.

“I expect him to die, especially since there is no room for him in the intensive care unit because there are so many patients that he is lying somewhere in a corridor,” he said.

“He didn’t want to get vaccinated,” Wiazecki said. “His siblings are also not vaccinated, and even though he is dying, they still don’t want to get vaccinated.”

With around 54% of Poles fully vaccinated, the country has a higher coronaviru­s inoculatio­n rate than some nearby countries. Ukraine’s vaccinatio­n rate is around 27%, and in Russia, where domestical­ly developed vaccines like Sputnik V are on offer, it is about 41%. Bulgaria, which like Poland belongs to the European Union, has a vaccinatio­n rate of around 26%, the lowest in the bloc.

The discovery of the omicron variant last month has fueled fears in Poland, where experts believe the variant is likely already circulatin­g though no cases have been confirmed. Many critical questions about omicron remain unanswered, including whether the virus causes more severe illness and how much it might evade immunity from past covid-19 illness or vaccines.

According to Polish media reports, the variant’s emergence led some holdouts to finally get their first vaccine shots, including in the southern mountain region of Podhale, where the vaccinatio­n rates are far below the national average.

But at the vaccinatio­n center in Warsaw, located in a blood donation center, there were not many first-timers. Coordinato­r Paula Rekawek said only one person had turned up in the center’s first three hours Tuesday to request an initial dose.

Warsaw restaurate­ur Artur Jarczynski has found a business opportunit­y in the high level of vaccine resistance. His popular Der Elefant was the first restaurant in Poland, and until recently the only one, to require customers to show proof of vaccinatio­n to enter.

Jarczynski said while traveling in Western Europe, he was asked for proof of vaccinatio­n to dine and thought it was a good practice. When he first introduced the requiremen­t at Der Elefant, anti-vaxxers demonstrat­ing in front of parliament brought their protest to his restaurant and he got police protection. Jarczynski says he also was bombarded by hateful phone calls for a couple of days.

Yet many patrons appreciate the rare public space where they can feel safe while enjoying a meal, such as the mussel soup, steaks and other fare served for lunch on Tuesday, he said. One diner, Ryszard Kowalski, said he liked knowing everyone around him was vaccinated but that the restaurant’s policy was proof “there is no need for government orders” to create safe environmen­ts.

But Jarczynski has not yet dared to impose the vaccine requiremen­t in several other Warsaw restaurant­s he owns.

He described Der Elefant as “an island in a country of almost 40 million people, which on the one hand makes us happy, but also sad that we are just such a tiny island.”

 ?? (AP/Czarek Sokolowski) ?? Hanna Zientara, an 83-year-old resident of Warsaw, receives a covid-19 booster shot Tuesday in Warsaw, Poland.
(AP/Czarek Sokolowski) Hanna Zientara, an 83-year-old resident of Warsaw, receives a covid-19 booster shot Tuesday in Warsaw, Poland.
 ?? ?? A server at the “Der Elefant” restaurant prepares drinks and food on a tray Tuesday in Warsaw. Der Elefant was the first, and until recently, the only restaurant in Poland to require proof of vaccinatio­n to dine.
A server at the “Der Elefant” restaurant prepares drinks and food on a tray Tuesday in Warsaw. Der Elefant was the first, and until recently, the only restaurant in Poland to require proof of vaccinatio­n to dine.
 ?? ?? Edyta Buko and her 12-year-old son Krzysztof wait at a vaccinatio­n center after the boy was vaccinated with his second dose of the Pfizer covid-19 vaccine in Warsaw.
Edyta Buko and her 12-year-old son Krzysztof wait at a vaccinatio­n center after the boy was vaccinated with his second dose of the Pfizer covid-19 vaccine in Warsaw.
 ?? ?? Andrzej Wiazecki, a 56-year-old resident of Warsaw who has just received a booster shot against covid-19, files his certificat­e in a folder.
Andrzej Wiazecki, a 56-year-old resident of Warsaw who has just received a booster shot against covid-19, files his certificat­e in a folder.
 ?? ?? A man waits in a vaccinatio­n center after getting a covid-19 vaccine in Warsaw.
A man waits in a vaccinatio­n center after getting a covid-19 vaccine in Warsaw.

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