Japan starts COVID-19 vaccinations with eye on Olympics

Japan launched its coronavirus vaccination campaign Wednesday, months after other major economies started giving shots and amid questions about whether the drive would would reach enough people quickly enough to save a Summer Olympics already delayed by the pandemic.
Despite a recent rise in
infections, Japan has largely dodged the kind of cataclysm that has battered
other wealthy countries’ economies, social networks and health care systems.
But the fate of the Olympics, and the billions of dollars at stake, makes
Japan’s vaccine campaign crucial. Japanese officials are also well aware that
rival China, which has had success beating back the virus, will host the Winter
Olympics next year, heightening the desire to make the Tokyo Games happen.
Japan’s rollout lagged behind
other places because it asked vaccine maker Pfizer to conduct clinical trials
with Japanese people, in addition to tests already conducted in six other
nations — part of an effort to address worries in a country with low vaccine
confidence.
That longstanding reluctance to
take vaccines — usually because of fears of rare side effects — as well as
concerns about shortages of the imported vaccines now hang over the rollout,
which will first give shots to medical workers, then the elderly and
vulnerable, and then, possibly in late spring or early summer, the rest of the
population.
Medical workers say vaccinations
will help protect them and their families, and business leaders hope the drive
will allow economic activity to return to normal. But the late rollout will
make it impossible to reach so-called herd immunity in the country of 127
million people before the Olympics begin in July, experts say.
That will leave officials
struggling to quell widespread wariness — and even outright opposition — among
citizens to hosting the Games. About 80% of those polled in recent media
surveys support cancellation or further postponement of the Olympics.
Despite that, Japanese Prime
Minister Yoshihide Suga and others in his government are forging ahead with
Olympic plans, billing the Games as “proof of human victory against the
pandemic.”
Japan has not seen the massive
outbreaks that have buffeted the United States and many European countries, but
a spike in cases in December and January raised concerns and led to a partial
state of emergency that includes requests for restaurants and bars to close
early. Suga has seen his support plunge to below 40% from around 70% when he
took office in September, with many people saying he was too slow to impose
restrictions and they were too lax.
The country is now seeing an
average of about 1 infection per 100,000 people — compared with 24.5 in the
United States or 18 in the United Kingdom. Overall, Japan has recorded about
420,000 cases and 7,000 deaths, according to data compiled by Johns Hopkins
University.
In a room full of journalists
Wednesday, Dr. Kazuhiro Araki, president of Tokyo Medical Center, rolled up his
sleeve and got a shot, one of the first Japanese to do so.
“It didn’t hurt at all, and I’m feeling very
relieved,” he told reporters while he was being monitored for any allergic
reaction. “We now have better protection, and I hope we feel more at ease as we
provide medical treatment.”
About 40,000 doctors and nurses
considered vulnerable to the virus because they treat COVID-19 patients are in
the first group slated to be vaccinated using shots developed by Pfizer and its
Germany-based partner BioNTech — after the vaccine was authorized Sunday by
Japan’s regulator. It requires two doses, though some protection begins after
the first shot.
Japan’s late authorization of the
vaccine means it lags behind many other countries. Britain started inoculations
on Dec. 8 and has given at least one shot to more than 15 million people, while
the United States began its campaign on Dec. 14 and about 40 million people
have received shots. Vaccines were rolled out in many European Union countries
in late December, and the campaigns there have come under criticism for being
slower.
But Japan’s vaccine minister, Taro
Kono, defended the delay as necessary to build confidence in a country where
mistrust of vaccines is decades old. Many people have a vague unease about
vaccines, partly because their side effects have often been played up by media
here.
“I think it is more important for the Japanese
government to show the Japanese people that we have done everything possible to
prove the efficacy and safety of the vaccine to encourage the Japanese people
to take the vaccine,” Kono said. “So at the end of the day we might have
started slower, but we think it will be more effective.
Half of the recipients of the
first shots will keep daily records of their condition for seven weeks; that
data will be used in a health study meant to inform people worried about the
side effects. Studies on tens of thousands of people of the Pfizer vaccine —
and others being administered currently in other countries — have found no
serious side effects.
“We would like to make efforts so that the
people can be vaccinated with a peace of mind,” Chief Cabinet Secretary
Katsunobu Kato told reporters.
The development of a Japanese
COVID-19 vaccine is still in the early stages, so the country, like many
others, must rely on imported shots — raising concerns about supply issues seen
in other places as producers struggle to keep up with demand. Suga on Wednesday
acknowledged the importance to strengthen vaccine development and production
capability as “important crisis management” and pledged to provide more support.
Supplies will help determine the
progress of the vaccination drive in Japan, Kono said.
The first batch of Pfizer vaccines
that arrived Friday is enough to cover the first group of medical workers. A
second batch is set for delivery next week.
To get the most from each vial,
Japanese officials are also scrambling to get specialized syringes that can
draw six doses per vial instead of five by standard Japanese-made syringes.
After the front-line medical
workers will come inoculations of 3.7 million more health workers starting in
March, followed by about 36 million people aged 65 and older beginning in
April. People with underlying health issues, as well as caregivers at nursing
homes and other facilities, will be next, before the general population
receives its turn.
Some critics have noted the vaccination drive — which requires medical workers to be carried out — adds to their burden, since Japanese hospitals are already strained by daily treatment of COVID-19 patients. There’s an added worry that hospitals will have no additional capacity to cope with the large number of overseas visitors the Olympics would involve.