Coronavirus vaccinations in Germany will take until 2022, assuming proven medications are found soon, according to a leading immunological adviser. He warned that the rush for the first vaccines may end in legal disputes.
Despite a global pharmaceutical rush to develop proven coronavirus vaccines, jabs for the 83-million people living in Germany could take until 2022, the chairman of the country's vaccination oversight commission, Thomas Mertens, said on Thursday.
"Even though vaccines will soon be available, the vaccination of the entire population by the end of 2021 will, in my opinion, not be completed," Mertens told the Funke Media Group.
Mertens, the head of the 18-member Standing Committee on Vaccination (Stiko) at the Robert Koch Institute (RKI), Germany's public health agency for disease control and prevention, also cautioned that it would "take a long time" for a noticeable change in the course of the infection across the entire population to emerge.
"For example, if you vaccinate 100,000 people a day — and this is a challenge — it would take 150 days to vaccinate 15 million people," said Mertens, explaining the massive effort that will be required to provide vaccinations to everyone in Germany who wants one.
Who gets the first shots?
A public prioritization, for vulnerable people, such as the elderly, as suggested recently by German Health Minister Jens Spahn, could lead to wrangles, Mertens added.
"It could happen that some who do not get an early chance will take legal action," he speculated.
The successful vaccination of Germany's population as a whole would not hinge on whether the campaign started "four weeks earlier or later" but on careful preparation and implementation, he insisted.
Transport and storage of doses would be important factors, Mertens said, as well as "the establishment of regional vaccination centers, simultaneous documentation of vaccinations nationwide, and the evaluation of safety aspects.”
Good communication, targeted at every age group and people of all levels of education, will be decisive in creating the "greatest possible acceptance" for the distribution of a vaccine, he added.
Latest Stories
-
Ghana-Russia Centre supports pupils of Pakro-Zongo basic school
37 minutes -
Ghana launches Malaria Youth Corps, leveraging youth power in fighting malaria
2 hours -
Book Review – All’s Well (Feehi): Living a Life Guided by Grace by Abednego Okoe Feehi Amartey and Theodora Dame Adjin-Tettey
3 hours -
French for health: A new initiative by French Embassy in Ghana
9 hours -
Ghana slowly retracing steps back to path of macroeconomic stability – Deloitte
9 hours -
Ghana’s debt service-to-revenue ratio reached all-time high of 127% in 2020, highest in SSA – IMF
9 hours -
Ghana’s consolidation efforts under IMF progamme to continue to be based on revenue
9 hours -
GPL 2024/25: Hearts beat 3-1 Chelsea to return to winning ways
10 hours -
Ghana set to host second Flag All-Star Game in Accra
11 hours -
Angor CREMA: Empowering Ghana’s coastal communities for sustainable growth
11 hours -
The Legon VC… and childhood memories
12 hours -
The absurd inequality of climate work: Overcoming dilemmas in the green transition
12 hours -
ORAL team receives first dossier of ¢500m National Service ghost names scandal
13 hours -
AfroFuture’s Culture Beach Jam comes off Dec. 28 & 29
13 hours -
NDC gov’t to address first quarter expenditure after January 7 – Ato Forson to Ghanaians
13 hours