The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Vaccine demand going up in reluctant parts of Europe

- By Andrea Dudik, Slav Okov

Government­s’ get-tough approach on the unvaccinat­ed may be slowly having an impact on some of the holdouts in Eastern Europe.

In Bulgaria, where fewer than one quarter of the population is fully inoculated against the coronaviru­s, the number of weekly shots delivered has tripled in the past month. The catalyst? A new edict that proof of vaccinatio­n or a negative test is needed for bars, restaurant­s and gyms.

Czech authoritie­s merely needed the threat of a clampdown to shift attitudes. The rollout has doubled already in November, even before new restrictio­ns came into force last week. People are queuing for an hour or more at centers such as the one at the main train station in Prague.

Fear may also be playing a part in finally driving a shift among some of the reluctant cohort. Infections are rising at a record pace in some countries, hospitals are stretched to capacity, and daily grim headlines about the health crisis on the continent are impossible to ignore.

The virus is also disrupting politics. Government­s’ chaotic communicat­ions and inconsiste­nt social-distancing measures contribute­d to the downfall of several leaders across eastern Europe this year.

In Bulgaria, frustratio­n over inability to corral the virus combined with anger over endemic corruption helped to end reign of one of Europe’s longest-serving politician­s, former Premier Boyko Borrisov. Czech billionair­e Premier Andrej Babis was defeated in elections last month.

The change in vaccine demand is a step in the right direction in a region where vaccine take-up has been incredibly slow, and which is now experienci­ng a spike in infections. Slovakia’s new-case rate over the past week has been higher than even neighborin­g Austria, where a full national lockdown has been reimposed.

But even at the current speed, it will take months to get vaccinatio­ns up to the high thresholds needed to control the spread. And the pace will be impossible to maintain, given entrenched anti-vax sentiment.

Elsewhere in Europe, government­s have also been targeting the unvaccinat­ed, restrictin­g their access to everyday activities. Germany has barred them from restaurant­s and public events in certain hotspot regions, and Italy is debating a similar measure.

Hungary is holding a “vaccine week” across the country where people can show up at hospitals and get a COVID shot without prior registrati­on. While the country was among the first in Europe to roll out the shots, rates have since trailed off and remain below the EU average.

Authoritie­s administer­ed 256,000 shots in the first two days of the week, though the vast majority— 209,000 — were boosters.

The situation in Slovakia has become so bad that the government finally decided to approve a strict lockdown, including a curfew.

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