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Amid COVID-19 booster data dilemma, EU nations’ plans diverge By



© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: A health worker prepares a booster dose of a coronavirus disease (COVID-19) vaccine, as vaccinations jump in Italy after the government made inoculation mandatory for all workers, in Rome, Italy, September 21, 2021. REUTERS/Yara Nardi

By Josephine Mason, Anthony Deutsch and Nikolaj Skydsgaard

LONDON (Reuters) – A patchwork of campaigns for an extra COVID-19 shot are being rolled out across the European Union even before the region’s drug watchdog rules on whether they are safe and effective.

Italy, France, Germany and Ireland have already started to administer booster shots and the Netherlands plans to do so soon but only to people who are immuno-suppressed.

But several EU countries are waiting for the European Medicines Agency (EMA) to give its opinion this week.

The fragmented picture mirrors the different approaches seen in the roll-out of shots across one of the world’s wealthiest regions at the turn of the year.

They also highlight the lack of consensus among scientists about how broadly they are needed, while governments seek to revive their ailing economies, fight the more infectious Delta variant, and avoid further lockdowns in the winter.

Underscoring what is at stake, the EU’s infectious diseases centre said on Thursday the region’s coverage of vaccines was still too low and there was a risk of a significant surge in cases, hospitalisations and deaths over the next six weeks.

Only 61% of the total population have been fully vaccinated, and only three countries – Malta, Portugal, Iceland – have vaccinated more than 75% of their total population, it said.

That compares with less than a quarter of the population in Bulgaria, one of the big laggards in EU vaccinations.

Still, the bloc’s push towards boosters will stir the debate over rich nations’ use of vaccines while poorer countries struggle to access supplies and inoculate their citizens.

The World Health Organization has called on countries to delay boosters until more people around the world have been inoculated.

EU NEXT IN LINE

If the EMA gives its backing for the Pfizer (NYSE:) booster, the 27-member bloc will join the United States, Britain and Israel, which have already received the green light to administer them.

Those have relied on data from Israel where boosters are being offered to the whole population showing that more than 1.1 million people aged 60 and older received a booster dose of Pfizer, resulting in a decline in overall infections as well as severe illness from COVID-19 in that group.

Pfizer and Moderna (NASDAQ:) have also each released analyses of clinical trial data showing that the effectiveness of their shots, initially estimated at over 90% against symptomatic COVID-19 infection, wanes over time.

Many vaccine experts say the data so far only suggest a need for boosters in older adults and people with compromised immune systems.

A decision by the EMA is expected on Monday, although the regulator is unlikely to provide…



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