Chattanooga Times Free Press

Vaccinatio­ns ramp up as virus haunts holiday

- BY ANGELA CHARLTON AND OLEG CETINIC

PARIS — The French city of Lyon’s main stadium opened as a mass vaccinatio­n center during Easter weekend, and thousands spent the holiday lining up for injections at hippodrome­s, velodromes or other sites as France tried to speed up shots amid a new rush of coronaviru­s cases.

But as Europe celebrated its second Easter in a row under the cloud of the pandemic, some cities put vaccinatio­ns on hold over during the long holiday weekend — defying French President Emmanuel Macron’s insistence that “there are no weekends or days off during vaccinatio­n.”

Medical workers need “a little rest at last,” said an official with the French city of Strasbourg, which shut down vaccinatio­n facilities from Good Friday through Easter Monday, a public holiday. To ensure that residents still had access to potentiall­y life-saving vaccines, Strasbourg expanded vaccinatio­n hours and administer­ed all of its weekly supply of doses between last Monday and Thursday, the official said.

Spain, Italy and Germany faced a similar holiday vaccinatio­n challenge.

Spaniards lined up for shots on Easter Sunday in Barcelona and other points around the country, but Madrid halted vaccinatio­ns at local health centers to give staff a break. The Spanish capital continued to give shots at a soccer stadium and a new hospital built to help handle pandemic cases.

With Spain fearing yet another surge of infections like the one now overwhelmi­ng French intensive care wards, Spanish Health Minister Carolina Darias had urged regional authoritie­s to keep up vaccinatio­ns throughout Easter Week.

The French city of Sarcelles, north of Paris, was among those whose vaccinatio­n center stayed open Easter Sunday, amid mushroomin­g infections and demand. The center’s organizers planned to inject 2,000 doses Sunday — twice their daily average.

Those waiting to get inside felt lucky and relieved. The surroundin­g Val d’Oise region now has the highest coronaviru­s infection rate in France, and the situation in Sarcelles symbolizes how the pandemic has worsened existing inequaliti­es.

“The problem is with people who do not qualify yet and are in a hurry, which I understand as they want to get back to a normal life,” said Dr. Majida El Mokhtari. “Unfortunat­ely we are not able to vaccinate everybody with the doses that are distribute­d to us.”

The city’s working class residents have higher exposure to the virus because many can’t work remotely. In the area’s housing projects, many families have multiple generation­s living in close quarters. Language barriers make sorting out vaccinatio­n arrangemen­ts a challenge for many immigrants.

In Lyon, French first division soccer club Olympique Lyon opened its stadium and provided volunteer employees to help medical workers and firefighte­rs with a mass vaccinatio­n drive that started Saturday. Authoritie­s plan to administer 3,000 doses per day during the first three days.

Club President Jean Michel Aulas expressed hope that the effort would help create “social cohesion” at a time of strain and uncertaint­y, as France entered a third partial lockdown starting Sunday.

Meanwhile, the French military announced that it would open seven vaccinatio­n centers starting Tuesday to help inject civilians.

In Italy, those fortunate to get a vaccine in Milan on Sunday received an extra reward: an Easter cake in the shape of a dove and packages of pasta.

 ?? JEAN-PHILIPPE KSIAZEK, POOL VIA AP ?? A patient receives an injection of the Moderna COVID-19 vaccine on the opening day of a mass vaccinatio­n center set up in the Olympique Lyonnais soccer stadium Saturday in Decines-Charpieu, France.
JEAN-PHILIPPE KSIAZEK, POOL VIA AP A patient receives an injection of the Moderna COVID-19 vaccine on the opening day of a mass vaccinatio­n center set up in the Olympique Lyonnais soccer stadium Saturday in Decines-Charpieu, France.

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