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AstraZeneca vaccinations resume in Europe
19 March 2021, 15:44
France’s prime minister rolled up his sleeve to get the shot on Friday.
Countries across Europe resumed vaccinations with the AstraZeneca shot on Friday, as leaders sought to reassure their populations it is safe.
France’s prime minister rolled up his sleeve to get the shot, as did a handful of other senior politicians across the continent where the inoculation drive has repeatedly stumbled and several countries are now re-imposing lockdowns as infections rise in many places.
Britain has been widely praised for its vaccination drive, although this week it announced that it, too, would be hit by supply shortages.
European Union countries, by contrast, have struggled to quickly roll out vaccines, and the pause of the AstraZeneca shot by many this week only added to those troubles.
The suspensions came after reports of blood clots in some recipients of the vaccine, even though international health agencies urged governments to press ahead with the shot, saying the benefits outweighed the risks.
On Thursday, the European Medicines Agency (EMA) said that the vaccine does not increase the overall incidence of blood clots, although it could not rule out a link to a small number of rare clots.
The move paved the way for more than a dozen European countries to begin using the vaccine again.
“It’s clear that the revocation of the suspension is for us a great relief because we have to strongly accelerate the vaccination campaign,” said Dr Giovanni Rezza, the head of prevention at the Italian Health Ministry.
Dr Rezza told reporters in Rome that Italy only reluctantly halted the campaign out of an abundance of caution, but needed to ramp it back up quickly to make up for lost time now that EMA had ruled positively.
He said Italy needed to more than double the 200,000 vaccinations per day the country had reached before the suspension to reach its goal of inoculating 80% of the population by September.
Health experts have expressed concern that even though the suspensions were brief, they would damage confidence in the vaccine at a time when many people are already hesitant to take a shot that was developed so quickly.
While many EU countries have struggled with such reluctance, it is even more of a worry in developing nations that may not have any other choice of vaccine.
AstraZeneca, which is cheaper and easier to store than many rival products, is key to vaccination drives in many poorer countries.
Amid these concerns, several politicians got the shot on Friday, including French Prime Minister Jean Castex, Slovenia’s president and prime minister, and a German state governor.
Prime Minister Boris Johnson also plans to. Britain never suspended use of AstraZeneca.
Mr Castex, 55, said he wanted to show full confidence in the shot.
The former director of the Pasteur Institute, Patrick Berche, told BFMTV the move was “a very beautiful gesture”.
France restarted the vaccine with some restrictions that seemed aimed at reducing the risk of potential side effects even further.
Other countries that are resuming their use of AstraZeneca shots include Slovenia and Bulgaria, a Balkan nation of seven million where only 355,000 people have been vaccinated with a first dose so far — the lowest number in the European Union.
But not everyone was as quick to return to the vaccine.
Denmark, which was the first country to pause using AstraZeneca, said Friday that it would wait another week before deciding whether to resume.
Sweden and Norway have also not restarted, and Finland decided to pause the vaccine for the first time Friday. It said it would suspend use for a week while it investigated two suspected cases of blood clots.
Authorities in Berlin said two large vaccination centres that offer the AstraZeneca shot to people in the German capital were reopening on Friday, and that people whose appointments were cancelled this week will be able to get the vaccine over the weekend without making a new one.