The Guardian (USA)

President of Brazil says it ‘makes no sense’ for him to be vaccinated

- Tom Phillips in Rio de Janeiro

More than 600,000 of his citizens have lost their lives to a Covid-19 outbreak he once pooh-poohed as a “little flu”, but Brazil’s science-denying president, Jair Bolsonaro, has announced he will decline to be vaccinated, saying “it makes no sense” for him to do so.

“With regard to the vaccine, I’ve decided not to have it any more,” the 66year-old populist told a right-wing radio station on Tuesday. “I’ve been looking at new studies … Why would I get vaccinated?”. He said his antibody levels were already “sky high” because of a past infection. “It would be the same as betting 10 reais (£1.30) on the lottery to win two. It makes no sense.” Bolsonaro said he was not anti-vaccinatio­n, but did oppose what he called the vaccinebuy­ing “frenzy”.

His comments, which came just days after Brazil’s Covid death toll rose above 600,000, caused anger, with many people accusing him of trying to distract from problems such as rising hunger, poverty and inflation.

“It is a stupid and selfish decision, because vaccinatio­n isn’t just about protecting yourself. Vaccinatio­n is about protecting those around you,” said Natália Pasternak, the head of a civil society group called the Question of Science Institute.

Pasternak said Bolsonaro’s claim that his supposedly high antibody levels rendered vaccinatio­n unnecessar­y was uninformed and fallacious. “The level of antibodies in your blood is not a metric for understand­ing whether someone is protected or not. Antibodies go up and down according to your exposure to the virus … so constantly measuring the level of antibodies in your blood isn’t what will tell you if you are protected or not.”

Pasternak, a visiting scholar at Columbia University, added: “What will tell you if you are protected or not is if you have memory cells, a sufficient­cellular response – and you don’t measure this with a simple antibody test.”

One recent study in the UK suggested previous infection did not necessaril­y protect a person against Covid in the longer term, especially

when caused by new variants of concern.

Brazil’s transmissi­on rate this week fell to 0.6, its lowest level since April 2020, an achievemen­t experts say is largely the result of an impressive mass vaccinatio­n campaign by the South American country’s NHS-inspired public health service.

More than 72% of Brazilians, 154 million people, have received at least one shot and 47% have been fully vaccinated. More than 253m doses have been administer­ed, although Bolsonaro says he has not received one, despite being eligible since April.

Pasternak doubted Bolsonaro’s behaviour would affect the way Brazilians have embraced Covid vaccines. “Brazilians are extremely pro-vaccine and this is the result of 30 or 40 years of a very active national immunisati­on programme that left Brazilians very comfortabl­e and very supportive of vaccinatio­n,” she said.

“But what Bolsonaro is doing could be the seed of anti-vaccine sentiment in the future. Brazil could find itself in the position the US or France were in 20 years ago – at the start of an anti-vax movement that today has condemned the US to the ridiculous situation of having an abundance of vaccines, yet seeing people who have refused to be vaccinated die.

She added: “We should not take this lightly. We need to think about what the impact of this could be in 10 years. With this kind of statement the president is opening the door for the anti-vax movement to take root in Brazil.”

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