Some Europeans get choosy about which vaccines they want

Many Europeans are desperate for a coronavirus vaccine. But not just any vaccine.
As AstraZeneca shots are rolling out to European Union nations this month, joining the Pfizer and Moderna doses already available, some people are balking at being offered a vaccine that they perceive — fairly or not — as second-best.
Poland began vaccinating teachers
Friday with the AstraZeneca vaccine, and some had misgivings about being put in
line for a vaccine they believe is less effective than the other
Ewelina Jankowska, the director of
a primary and high school in Warsaw’s southern Wilanow district, said nobody in
her school was enthusiastic about getting the AstraZeneca shot, although many
signed up, eager for any protection against a virus that has upended their
lives and their students’ schooling.
“I still fear the illness more than the
AstraZeneca vaccine,” said Jankowska, who was infected with COVID-19 in
November and had a very slow recovery.
AstraZeneca, an Anglo-Swedish
company, developed its vaccine with the University of Oxford. While regulators
in more than 50 countries, including the EU’s drug watchdog, have authorized
its widespread use, it has attracted more criticism than others due to concerns
about its human trials.
Several European nations have
recommended the drug only for people under 65, and other countries have
recommended it for those under 55, because AstraZeneca’s trials included a
relatively small number of older people.
AstraZeneca CEO Pascal Soriot
acknowledged the criticism but said regulators had reviewed the data and deemed
the vaccine safe and effective. COVID-19 vaccines are in short supply, he said,
and the AstraZeneca shot offers high levels of protection against severe
disease, which is the most important benchmark in fighting a virus that has
killed more than 2.3 million people worldwide.
“Is it perfect? No, it’s not perfect, but it’s
great,” Soriot said Thursday. “We’re going to save thousands of lives and
that’s why we come to work every day.”
The World Health Organization says
the AstraZeneca vaccine is about 63% effective at preventing symptomatic
COVID-19 after two doses. That’s less than the 95% effectiveness reported by
Pfizer and Moderna, but experts caution against such comparisons as the studies
were done at different times and under different conditions. Furthermore, all
have proven extremely effective at preventing serious illness and death.
“If you’re offered any approved vaccine, take
it,” said Peter Piot, director of the London School of Hygiene and Tropical
Medicine. “They have all been found safe. Vaccines are the world’s route back
to some sort of normality.”
French President Emmanuel Macron
angered scientists last month when he called the AstraZeneca vaccine
“quasi-ineffective” for people over 65 — a comment that came hours before the
European Medicines Agency approved it and said it could be used for all adults,
including those over 65. Those who criticized Macron argued that he had spoken
irresponsibly and had encouraged vaccine skepticism.
French Health Minister Olivier
Veran, who is 40, made a point this week of getting the AstraZeneca vaccine to
show government confidence in it for under-65s.
Adding to AstraZeneca’s troubles
have been criticism from the EU about delivery shortages, its lack of approval
yet in the U.S., and a preliminary study that raised questions about the
vaccine’s ability to combat a COVID-19 variant discovered in South Africa. In
its favor, however, is that it is cheaper and can be stored at refrigerator
temperatures — not the far colder temperatures required of the Pfizer and
Moderna vaccines.
In Cyprus, Health Minister
Constantinos Ioannou warned that opting for one over another risks delaying
inoculations, given the limited deliveries of Pfizer and Moderna vaccines in
the coming weeks, and he noted “all three vaccines reduce hospitalizations and
deaths drastically.”
Yet in Poland, Spain and Italy,
some unions complained that their members are slated to receive the AstraZeneca
vaccine, expressing concerns they were being treated as less important than
groups getting the Pfizer or Moderna doses.
Police unions in Spain have raised
concerns about a government decision to administer AstraZeneca shots to police,
military, firefighters and teachers.
Some Italian doctors in the
private sector are declining AstraZeneca shots, saying they want the Pfizer or
Moderna shots going to public health care workers.
“I’m not a no-vax AstraZeneca. But for an
at-risk population, health care workers, they should use the same vaccination
strategy for everyone and not create any discrimination,” said Dr. Paolo Mezzana,
a Rome plastic surgeon who helps administer a Facebook group of private
doctors. They have been posting refusals to accept the AstraZeneca shot after
vaccinations began this week.
In Poland, the government
announced earlier this month that the planned delivery of more than 1 million
AstraZeneca doses meant teachers could get their shots ahead of schedule
because the vaccine would not be given to older adults.
But instead of expressing relief,
the head of the main teachers’ union, Slawomir Broniarz, criticized the use of
the vaccine in remarks that, in turn, came under fire from scientists and the
government.
Michal Dworczyk, who leads the
government’s vaccine effort, said he regretted “that some irresponsible
politicians or trade unions have tried to scare teachers or cause such anxiety
by giving false information about the AstraZeneca vaccine.”
Yet a sense of misgiving has
settled in among teachers, who already have been in conflict with the
government for years over low wages and unpopular reforms.
Patrycja Swistowska, who teaches
second grade at the Wilanow school, said she signed up for the AstraZeneca shot
despite her fears and confusion.
“I feel that teachers are treated a bit worse
and this is the vaccine that they offered us. They didn’t offer us the vaccines
given to doctors and other professional groups,” said Swistowska, 39. “I am
disoriented and I don’t feel good about this. We are paid worse and this is
just another example of us being shown our place.“
In Italy, the head of the SAP police
union, Stefano Paoloni, argued that if officers believe they are getting a
less-effective vaccine via the police force, they can opt out and wait to get
another shot later when the rest of the population is vaccinated. That would
defeat the strategy to vaccinate as many at-risk people as quickly as possible.
Some unions are going ahead with
the AstraZeneca rollout without complaining, reflecting gratitude to get any
protection.
Dr. Arianna Patricarca, a
52-year-old Italian dentist who received the AstraZeneca shot Thursday, called
it “a great opportunity and I am very happy that I did it.”
Warsaw preschool director
Agnieszka Grabowska also welcomed getting the AstraZeneca vaccine Friday.
“It is a great relief,” said Grabowska, 48,
adding that she was exhausted after a year of the pandemic.
“I have been waiting for this
moment all year,” she said.