Daily Sabah (Turkey)

COVID-19 vaccinatio­n drive speeds up with new age group

As Turkey added a new vaccine to its arsenal of jabs against the coronaviru­s and a new age group of citizens became eligible for inoculatio­n, queues swelled outside vaccinatio­n centers

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AN OVERWHELMI­NG interest in vaccinatio­n against the coronaviru­s is evident in Turkey, where vaccine skepticism had previously worried authoritie­s. Long lines have formed outside clinics and hospitals almost every day since the announceme­nt by the Health Ministry Monday that people aged 55 and above are now eligible for vaccinatio­n. Turkey started a vaccinatio­n campaign in January for health care workers, before including others, starting from the oldest age group. The age limit was gradually decreased to 65 and above and has now reached 55 and above.

Just last week, authoritie­s complained that more than 23% of people aged 65 and above have not applied for vaccinatio­n yet while 14% of health care workers have shunned the inoculatio­n so far. Yet, the lines outside clinics demonstrat­e that people are more willing than ever to get their jabs.

Citizens can learn whether they are eligible for vaccinatio­n through an app, online, or by sending a text message and they can book an appointmen­t the same way. This apparently increasing interest that has led to the queues, however, can be explained by several factors according to Turkish media. One of them is that people aged 55 and above make up the largest proportion of the overall population. Another factor is the popularity of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine, though its supplies are limited for now in Turkey.

The vaccine is not available in all hospitals as it needs extra care for storage conditions, further prolonging the lines of vaccine hopefuls.

The country also offers vaccinatio­n appointmen­ts in the evening, after iftar, a time to break the fast observed by Muslims in the month of Ramadan. The faithful are required to abstain from eating and drinking throughout the day but the top religious authority had recently announced that the vaccinatio­n would not break the fast.

“This is a civic duty,” Tekin Sagun told Demirören News Agency (DHA) as he waited for his jab at Ankara City Hospital

on Tuesday in the Turkish capital.

Cemal Kaplan, another citizen who lined up for vaccinatio­n, says he cannot understand how “anti-vaxxers” found support. “You have to get vaccinated if there is a vaccine. Even a minimum advantage against coronaviru­s counts in this time of pandemic,” he says.

Serap Öztürk says she is “anti anti-vaxxers.” “It is simple. You get vaccinated so we can get rid of the pandemic. I don’t know if there is any other solution,” she said.

Medical profession­als voice concerns on anti-vaccine activists thriving on social media and repeatedly urge the public not to abstain from inoculatio­n.

“Anti-vaxxers flourish as a result of a combinatio­n of ignorance, misuse of science and malicious intentions,” said professor Mehmet Ceyhan, a children’s infectious diseases expert at Hacettepe University.

Speaking to DHA, Ceyhan said skeptics and anti-vaxxers were claiming that vaccines were useless but this was not true. “Up to 75% of the population should be vaccinated before we see a concrete overall impact of the vaccine on society. It is wrong to expect a sharp drop in cases with only a small ratio of vaccinatio­n. So far, a minor proportion of the nation is vaccinated with both doses. But people should be aware that the number of cases would grow more and more if it was not for vaccinatio­ns and restrictio­ns,” he said.

Ceyhan points out that Australia, New Zealand and Israel were exemplary as they both clung to measures and vaccinatio­n at the same time, instead of relaxing measures in proportion with the vaccinatio­n drive.

NEW CASES, MORE MEASURES

Though vaccinatio­n gains momentum, coronaviru­s cases still fluctuate above 60,000 in the country. Çanakkale, a western province, currently tops the list of places with the highest rate. Between April 10 and April 16, some 962 cases were recorded per 100,000 people in the province, forcing the local pandemic board to take some radical measures.

The board, overseen by the governorat­e, announced the measures on Tuesday, including a ban on more than two people standing too close to each other in public spaces. Though it may seem like an overreacti­on, crowding in parks, on the streets are the main factors driving up the cases.

Recently, the pandemic board of the province had closed all promenades, parks and public gardens to the public until May 17. The board also ordered locals not to go to open-air marketplac­es, open on Tuesdays and Fridays, more than once a week.

Officials will check the IDs of shoppers at the marketplac­es to enforce the ban. The pandemic board also imposed a requiremen­t of producing a HES (Life Fits Into Home) code for visitors to cemeteries and people attending funerals.

Other measures, which are also implemente­d nationwide, are already in place in Çanakkale, including curfews, while schools and some businesses remain closed.

The authoritie­s also ordered businesses that are exempt from closures to switch to flexible working hours and/or working from home, if possible. Families are also banned from accepting guests or visiting each other at home.

 ??  ?? A woman gets vaccinated at a hospital, in the capital Ankara, Turkey, April 20, 2021.
A woman gets vaccinated at a hospital, in the capital Ankara, Turkey, April 20, 2021.

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