Bangkok Post

Athletes get to jump jab queues

- ANDREW KEH

In the ongoing calculus of how to distribute limited supplies of the coronaviru­s vaccine, the broad global consensus often starts with a few groups: doctors and nurses, the ill and the ageing, front-line workers and teachers.

At no point, typically, would elite athletes — a nation’s finest synchronis­ed swimmers and high divers, its fastest sprinters and racewalker­s, its top gymnasts and badminton players — factor into the early discussion.

And yet, that is precisely the debate happening around the world in the final months before this summer’s Tokyo Olympics. It is not just a question of bioethics: The way individual government­s proceed on vaccinatio­ns over the next few months could determine whether the Olympics unfold as a cathartic mass celebratio­n of internatio­nal sports, or a month-long global supersprea­der event.

In any other year, profession­al athletes — young, healthy and obviously very fit — would be ushered to the back of the line. This year, though, with the Olympic Games to open in Japan, where rising case counts early this year forced many of the country’s largest cities into a state of emergency last month, the question has become rather more vexing.

A growing number of countries, a group as diverse as India, Hungary and Israel, have announced that they will push their Olympians to the front of their vaccinatio­n lines. Mexico’s president in February placed his country’s athletes in a priority group alongside medical workers and teachers. Lithuania has moved even faster; it began administer­ing vaccine shots to its Olympians weeks ago.

For many countries, the early vaccinatio­ns are merely an effort to avoid both untimely cases and interrupti­ons in precious training time. Neither Japanese organisers nor the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee will require proof of vaccinatio­n or quarantine periods for anyone attending or competing in the games, although there will be regular testing for athletes, coaches, journalist­s and officials while they are in Japan.

Other national Olympic committees, out of a sense of moral duty or the fear of a public backlash, have said they will not ask for preferenti­al treatment in vaccinatio­ns. “I certainly don’t think there is any reason why athletes should be given special treatment,” said Evan Dunfee, an elite racewalker from Canada, a country where Olympians, so far, do not have vaccine priority.

Yet even ethics experts are split on the propriety — and the global health consequenc­es — of Olympic line jumping. “Athletes are essential workers,” said Arthur Caplan, a professor of medical ethics at the New York University School of Medicine, echoing a view expressed in recent weeks by the government­s of Denmark, Serbia and the Philippine­s, who have all said they will usher prospectiv­e Olympians toward the front of the vaccinatio­n line.

Dick Pound, a powerful Internatio­nal Olympic Committee member from Canada, suggested in January that taking “300 or 400 vaccines out of several million” for athletes in Canada should not warrant any public outcry.

But many politician­s, sports leaders, athletes and everyday citizens — millions of them just as eager to get vaccinated as quickly as possible — would disagree. And so the debate, in some ways, has pitted those appealing to rigid ideas of bioethical morality against others calling for exceptions made in the spirit of common sense in extraordin­ary times. The Olympics will, after all, bring together representa­tives of more than 200 countries, and then send them home to every corner of the globe after several weeks of competitio­n.

In an interview, Dunfee criticised Mr Pound for suggesting Canadian athletes should get an earlier place in line; on the contrary, he said, athletes had a duty to be role models in society.

That has roughly been the official position so far in countries like the United States, Britain and Italy, to name a few. “Athletes in the US agree that they should wait their proper place in line,” said Bree Schaaf, a former Olympian who is now the chair of Team USA Athletes’ Advisory Council.

But declining to skip the line has not precluded efforts from officials to expedite vaccinatio­ns for their athletes within the rules. When Sarah Hirshland, chief executive of the US Olympic & Paralympic Committee, met government officials in February, she stated they would follow national public health guidelines, but still laid out a hopeful best-case scenario in which they could be vaccinated before domestic trial events in mid-June.

Similarly, Michael Schirp, a spokesman for the German team, noted there was a delicate way that sports organisati­ons were communicat­ing with authoritie­s, articulati­ng at once a desire to follow the same rules as everyone else and the sense of urgency they feel with the games only months away. “We’re saying while we don’t want to jump the queue, we would be thankful for our athletes to get vaccinated as soon as possible,” Mr Schirp said.

All of this has presented a quandary for the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee and organisers of the Tokyo Games. When the athletes arrive in Japan in July, they will be entering a country that is nowhere close to herd immunity. Japan started vaccinatin­g health care workers only in mid-February, and it does not plan to start inoculatin­g older residents until mid-April. Taro Kono, the cabinet minister in charge of the vaccine rollout, recently said that the games were “not on my schedule at all”.

Having thousands of unvaccinat­ed people from hundreds of countries congregate is hardly ideal. Having athletes around the world being perceived as skipping the line to get vaccinated, however, would not be a good look for a games already mired in delays, cost overruns and public dissatisfa­ction.

The response of Olympic officials and local organisers has been to delegate the responsibi­lity to government­s and national Olympic committees, encouragin­g them to find ways to get their athletes and coaches vaccinated, declaring publicly that national protocols should be followed, and hoping for the best.

Giovanni Malagò, president of the Italian Olympic committee, told the newspaper La Republicca that he knew his counterpar­ts in other countries were requesting vaccines for their athletes. “We will never ask for this and we don’t want it either,” he said.

He may not have to: Many Italian Olympians — the country expects to send about 300 to Japan — could get vaccinated soon anyway. A spokesman for the Italian Olympic committee said that around 60% of their prospectiv­e Olympians belonged to sports clubs affiliated with the country’s military, which automatica­lly puts them on the priority list.

“I know there’s a lot of athletes who, behind closed doors, feel it’s warranted that they get priority,” Dunfee, of Canada, said. “But public opinion is so vehemently against this stuff that you’re not going to win anyone over or gain any Brownie points by admitting to that point of view.”

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