The Star Malaysia

How I overcame my fear of the Covid-19 vaccine

- By SEGUNDO ECLAR ROMERO — Philippine Daily Inquirer/ANN

THE biggest mobilisati­onal effort that needs to be mounted by Filipinos that will affect their lives over the next decade is the effort to get 75 million adults vaccinated against Covid-19. This is equivalent to all the presidenti­al candidates during the 2016 presidenti­al election joining hands and going out like crazy to campaign for people to get vaccinated. Every qualified adult knows that it is important to register and vote, even if they do not do so. As for Covid-19, 40% of Filipinos will hesitate or refuse to be vaccinated.

I have openly voiced my own vaccine hesitancy to my friends on social media. But I have changed my mind. My hesitancy melted after viewing a single video of Fr. Nicanor Austriaco, OP, a Dominican priest with a PhD in biology from the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology, talking to the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippine­s. I realised that my vaccine hesitancy had been coloured by my political journey over the past several years.

The biggest source of my vaccine hesitancy was the unison with which the scientific community, upon the outbreak of Covid-19 over a year ago, cautioned the world against expecting a vaccine against Covid-19 anytime soon. Vaccine developmen­t was supposed to take years and decades. Then, suddenly, the big pharmaceut­ical companies started coming out with vaccines like magic in record time. I viewed this developmen­t with some suspicion. But Father Austriaco explains that the Covid-19 vaccine developmen­t has been short-circuited by the generous funding of government­s and the private sector. Also, the virulence and intensity with which the pandemic has taken many countries like Brazil and the United States has given researcher­s adequate subjects and material to undertake the required laboratory work and clinical trials. This was not the same for other diseases like Ebola or HIV.

The second source of my hesitancy was my misunderst­anding of what 60% efficacy of a vaccine might mean. If my chance of being infected by Covid-19 is still 40% anyway, why would I accept that and not go for the 95% efficacy that is offered by other vaccines?

Now, I am made to understand that the 60% applies to the chance of preventing a severe infection, perhaps spelling the difference between a mild cough and “intubation”, or life and death. Put that way, I would go for an earliest available vaccine with 50% efficacy.

This goes to my third source of hesitancy. Why is the government insisting on promoting only Sinovac to the Filipino nation, knowing that the political trust atmosphere militates against that acceptance?

Despite my continuing doubts about corruption, the clincher for me is this: The production of vaccines by Western countries for 2021 (good for 5.6 billion people) is not enough for the whole world (7.8 billion people), and already 80% of the anticipate­d total Western production has been bought pre-emptively by the United States, the European Union, Britain, Canada, and Japan.

Only 800 million doses are available for the rest of the world, which is why the vaccine production of China (Sinovac and Sinopharm) and Russia (Gamaleya) are critical for marginal countries like the Philippine­s.

My fourth source of hesitancy relates to the impossible delivery and storage requiremen­ts of the Pfizer and AstraZenec­a vaccines that the government aims to procure. These vaccines require ultra-low temperatur­es “colder than Antarctica”.

In a country where relief goods and ordinary drugs are left to expire and rot, there is not much chance the Pfizer or AstraZenec­a vaccine you get would still be potent when it reaches you.

The strategy apparently is that these two vaccines will be reserved for Metro Manila, where ultra-low temperatur­e storage and delivery facilities might be acquired and deployed in time.

I now realise with alarm that for our survival as a nation, everybody needs to help dissipate vaccine hesitancy, especially among the vulnerable poor, and with the more virulent Covid-19 strain already in our midst. Science has done its part, but it is not enough.

 ?? — AP ?? Equal immunity: With Western-produced vaccines snapped up by the richer countries first, the vaccine production of China and Russia are critical for marginal countries like the Philippine­s.
— AP Equal immunity: With Western-produced vaccines snapped up by the richer countries first, the vaccine production of China and Russia are critical for marginal countries like the Philippine­s.

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