The Columbus Dispatch

EU agency: Focus first on vaccines

- Lorne Cook

BRUSSELS – The European Union's infectious diseases agency on Thursday urged countries to push ahead with their primary coronaviru­s vaccinatio­n programs and played down the need for booster shoots to ward off the delta variant among the general public.

The European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control said that approved vaccines are “currently highly effective” in limiting the impact of COVID-19. “The priority now should be to vaccinate all those eligible individual­s who have not yet completed their recommende­d vaccinatio­n course,” it said.

After a slow start to Europe's vaccine drive, the EU'S executive branch, the European Commission, announced this week that on average 70% of adults are fully vaccinated across the 27-nation bloc. But national vaccinatio­n rates vary, with Bulgaria and Romania notably slow with their programs.

On Wednesday, France became the first big EU country to start administer­ing booster shots of COVID-19 vaccine to people over 65 and those with underlying health conditions as the delta variant spreads in the country. Spanish health authoritie­s are considerin­g similar action.

The ECDC said additional shots should be considered for people “with severely weakened immune systems” if the first shots don't protect them well enough, but that “there is no urgent need for the administra­tion of booster doses of vaccines to fully vaccinated individual­s in the general population.”

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