Las Vegas Review-Journal

Spaniards have faith in vaccinatio­ns

Nearly 54% of adults received 2 vaccine jabs

- By Joseph Wilson

BARCELONA, Spain — Like many of Spain’s 20-somethings, Sergio Rosado has seen the new, more contagious coronaviru­s strain strike those too eager to cut loose when authoritie­s rolled back health restrictio­ns with vaccinatio­ns picking up pace.

But the 22-year-old student shares the country’s widespread public trust in the vaccines, and Rosado plans to get his shots as soon as his turn comes.

“I have friends that have caught COVID-19 at big parties. Lots of people I know have caught it,” Rosado said. “I did go out too, but to places without many people and in controlled spaces, and with face masks.”

Spain, like its fellow European Union members, got off to a slow start in administer­ing shots compared to Britain and the United

States after regulators approved the first vaccines. But once deliveries by drugmakers started flowing to meet demand, the country quickly made up ground.

After only fully vaccinatin­g 10 percent of its adults from January until the end of April, now nearly 54 percent of its adults, around 25 million people, have received two vaccine jabs, making Spain one of the inoculatio­n leaders in the 27-nation European Union.

The program is built on Spain’s efficient public health care system, a well-ordered vaccinatio­n plan that stuck strictly to age groups, and a populace confident in the safety of childhood immunizati­ons and therefore largely resistant to skepticism about COVID-19 jabs.

“Vaccinatio­n forms part of our genome,” Amós García, president of the Spanish Associatio­n of Vaccinolog­y, told The Associated Press. “Our profession­als have always believed strongly in the benefits of vaccines. We have always strongly encouraged children from a very young age to get their vaccines.”

Spain’s public health care system, which has suffered budget cuts in the past decade, buckled last year under the first wave of the virus, which has claimed at least 81,000 lives in the country.

But fears that the health system wouldn’t be up to the job of managing a massive vaccine rollout proved unfounded. Eligibilit­y informatio­n was widely disseminat­ed, and people didn’t hesitate to sign up when it was their age group’s turn. Vaccinatio­n lines generally moved swiftly, and unlike France, there was no paperwork to get in the way when people went to their local clinics or mass vaccinatio­n points.

It also helped that no politician, not even on the fringes of the right or left, sowed doubts about the vaccines. The only political issue regarding the vaccines was when they weren’t arriving fast enough.

“This is not a question of progressiv­es or of conservati­ves. It is a public health question,” Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez told MSNBC while on a visit last week to the United States.

More than 90 percent of Spain’s public health workers have been vaccinated, compared with 42 percent of public health workers in France.

 ?? Olmo Calvo The Associated Press ?? A man cools his head with an ice bag Tuesday waiting to be vaccinated against COVID-19 at the Isabel Zendal Hospital in Madrid, Spain. Spain is trying to stamp out a new wave of COVID-19 among its youth with a robust vaccinatio­n program.
Olmo Calvo The Associated Press A man cools his head with an ice bag Tuesday waiting to be vaccinated against COVID-19 at the Isabel Zendal Hospital in Madrid, Spain. Spain is trying to stamp out a new wave of COVID-19 among its youth with a robust vaccinatio­n program.

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