EU nations kickstart mass COVID-19 vaccination programme in ‘touching moment of unity(VIDEO)

Filed under: All News,more news,Opinion,RECENT POSTS,Somali news |
Doctor Bernhard Ellendt, left, injects the COVID-19 vaccine into a nursing home resident in Halberstadt, Germany, Saturday, Dec. 26, 2020.
Doctor Bernhard Ellendt, left, injects the COVID-19 vaccine into a nursing home resident in Halberstadt, Germany, Saturday, Dec. 26, 2020.   –   Copyright  Matthias Bein/dpa Via AP

European Union nations have officially kicked off a coordinated effort to give COVID-19 vaccinations to adults among their 450 million citizens, marking a moment of hope on the continent.

Shots were administered on Sunday morning to the most vulnerable people and health care workers across the bloc.

1:46NOW PLAYING


VIDEO_COVID-19 vaccine delivery and vaccination across EU

 “Getting vaccinated is an act of love and responsibility toward the collective whole,” Claudia Alivernini, a 29-year-old Spallanzani nurse, said on the eve of being the first to receive the shot in Italy, which has Europe’s worth virus toll at more than 71,000 dead.

Italian Health Minister Roberto Speranza, speaking outside the hospital, said the coordinated EU rollout was a sign of hope for the continent, but that people still cannot let down their guard for several months more.

Germany, Hungary and Slovakia started their COVID-19 vaccination campaign on Saturday, a day earlier than the European Commission’s planned coordinated roll-out across all member states.

EU member states each received a first shipment of just under 10,000 doses of the Pfizer/BioNtech vaccine on Saturday but vaccination was not supposed to start across the bloc’s 27 nations until Sunday.

But Hungary’s Minister for Human Resources, Miklos Kasler, said in a statement the vaccines had been delivered to the South-Pest Hospital Centre in Budapest and that healthcare workers had started receiving the jab.

“Today, we have taken an important step in curbing the epidemic,” he added.

Slovakia’s Health Ministry said in a Facebook post on Saturday afternoon that “vaccination will begin in the faculty hospital in Nitra today”.

Immunisation also began in a German nursing home.

“Every day that we wait is one day too many,” said Tobias Krueger, operator of a nursing home in Halberstadt, in the northeast region of Saxony-Anhalt.

It is unclear why both eastern countries started their vaccination campaign a day earlier than the European Commission’s coordinated roll-out planned for.

In a video released on Twitter on Saturday, von der Leyen said that Europe “is starting to turn the page on a difficult year”.

“Today is delivery day and tomorrow vaccination against COVID-19 is beginning across the European Union”.

“Our European Vaccination Days are a touching moment of unity,” she added.

The Pfizer/BioNtech vaccine, which requires two shots, was approved by the European Medicines Agency (EMA) on December 21. The EU has secured up to 300 million doses through an Advance Purchase Agreement and expects for the first 200 million doses to have been delivered by September 2021.

But it has also struck similar deals with other pharmaceutical companies including Sanofi-GlaxoSmithKline, AstraZeneca, Janssen Pharmaceutica NV, CureVac, and Moderna. These contracts mean the bloc “has secured enough doses of vaccines for our whole population of 450 million people,” von der Leyen said in her video.

The EMA is expected to decide whether to approve the Moderna vaccine on January 6.