THE RISK OF INOCULATION: Why frontliners resist getting vaccinated
The coronavirus vaccine is seen as the only way to combat the pandemic. Medical and nursing staff are at high risk of contracting and spreading the disease.
By : migrator
Update: 2021-01-08 21:38 GMT
Chennai
So why do many of them in Germany not want to get vaccinated? Berlin’s Bethel Hospital in the tranquil south of the capital is a rather small institution, far removed from the hustle and bustle of large clinics. But of course, the coronavirus pandemic has changed all that.
A once-vacant ward has been converted for vaccinations. But what is still missing is the vaccine itself, as with so many other locations in Germany. That is somewhat frustrating, says senior physician and pandemic officer Hans Weigeldt. After all, he says, the vaccine is required to offer a glimmer of hope after months of hard work, to lift the spirits of health workers. Intensive care nurse Sebastian Schmidt wants to be vaccinated against the virus as soon as he can. “I see coronavirus-related deaths every day at work and see how patients suffer, how seriously ill patients are because of this virus, and I definitely want to get vaccinated against it,” he tells DW. “Also not only to protect myself but also my relatives. I have a responsibility to do my bit to protect others.”
This, one would imagine, is the general attitude of all doctors and nurses towards the long-awaited vaccination. But in fact, the picture is far more nuanced. The view of nurse Vivien Kochmann, at the Bethel Hospital, is an example of this. For months, she has been meticulously observing the social distancing rules, wearing a facemask, washing her hands. As a mother of a small child, she has had to take extra care, drastically reducing her contacts. But when it comes to vaccinations, she says, she doesn’t want to go straight to the front of the line, preferring to wait: “I’m cautious here and a bit wary of the whole thing. I’m worried because the vaccine hasn’t been around long enough to be able to just say: ‘Ok, I’m now 100% convinced of it.’ But that’s just my personal feeling.”
But Kochmann is not an anti-vaxxer. Indeed, she has been vaccinated against many diseases. But she has been working at the hospital long enough to know how much time is needed before a vaccine really takes effect. Maybe, she hopes, the vaccines will get better over the course of the year. And, above all, so will the information about the possible risks involved. Skepticism is not uncommon among medical staff in Germany. A survey conducted by the “German Society for Internal Intensive Care and Emergency Medicine” (DGIIN) and the “German Interdisciplinary Association for Intensive Care and Emergency Medicine” (DIVI) back in December last year showed that only 73% of doctors, and just under 50% of nurses, in Germany want to be vaccinated against SARS-CoV-2. Although a clear majority of respondents said the vaccine was important to contain the pandemic.
A spokesman for a German federation of care homes, BPA, however, paints a rather confusing picture. BPA President, Bernd Meurer, said: “We know of care facilities where almost 100% of the staff are vaccinated. In others, two-thirds have refused to do so.” Health Minister Jens Spahn struck a similar note this week. He spoke of nursing homes where vaccination is already being carried out and where the vaccination rate among the staff has reached 80%. However, in other homes he said, the rate is only 20%.
The reasons for this vaccine skepticism are currently the subject of heated debate in Germany. The health expert of the SPD in the Bundestag, Karl Lauterbach, himself an epidemiologist, suspects that many doctors and nurses believe that they do not belong in the high-risk group and are well protected by special clothing. In contrast, the survey in December identified fear of long-term side effects, as the main reason for rejecting the vaccine. In fact, the staff at other clinics in Berlin told DW that some women were worried about the risks involved if they later went on to become pregnant.
This article was provided by Deutsche Welle
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