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Vakcinacija


Tsai

Vakcinacija  

328 members have voted

  1. 1. Da li ćete se vakcinisati?

    • Da, prvom prilikom
      220
    • Da, ali ne odmah, sačekao bih prvi talas reakcija
      58
    • Ne zasad, ali sam spreman da promenim mišljenje
      16
    • Ne, nikako
      20
    • Ne znam
      14
  2. 2. Koju vakcinu biste napre uzeli?

    • Pfizer and BioNTech
      144
    • Moderna
      14
    • Sputnik V
      25
    • AstraZeneca
      21
    • Sinopharm China
      10
    • Svejedno mi je
      114


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Quote

Hungary reaches deal to buy China’s Sinopharm vaccine
Jan 14, 2021

Hungary’s government said on Thursday (14 January) it has reached a deal with China’s Sinopharm to buy its coronavirus vaccine, the country’s latest move to break away from Brussels as it tries to speed up inoculations to lift curbs on the economy.

Hungary would be the first EU country to accept a Chinese vaccine if approved by Hungarian authorities. Under European Union rules it would have to give an ultra-fast emergency use approval, rather than waiting for the European drug regulator EMA to give the go-ahead for the Chinese vaccine.

Britain took a similar approach in December before it exited the bloc. It approved Pfizer Inc’s COVID-19 vaccine on 2 December, jumping ahead of the rest of the world in the race to begin a mass inoculation programme.

Hungary’s nationalist government has sharply criticised the EU for what it said were way too slow vaccine purchases and deliveries that now threatened an economic rebound.

Foreign Minister Péter Szijjártó said in a Facebook post on Thursday that due to the “scandalously” slow vaccine procurements of the European Commission, a fast rollout of vaccines could not happen early this year.

“If we look beyond the EU’s borders, we can see that in the US, in Britain and in Israel, people are vaccinated at warp speed,” Szijjártó said.

The government also passed a decree on Thursday allowing it to start procurements outside the EU’s centralised scheme.

Szijjártó’s spokesman told Reuters the approval process for the vaccine developed by Sinopharm’s Beijing-based affiliate, Beijing Institute of Biological Products Co., Ltd (BIBP), was already “underway”.

Beyond the supply bottlenecks, Hungarians are fairly sceptical about the new vaccines, with just about one in five people definitely planning to get a shot based on a late-December survey by the Central Statistics Office.

Prime Minister Viktor Orbán’s chief of staff Gergely Gulyas told a briefing on Thursday that vaccine shipments under the EU’s programme were arriving too slowly, with weekly shipments of less than 100,000 doses, and Hungary would continue talks with Russia and China about additional vaccine purchases.

“We have practically made an agreement with Sinopharm,” Gulyas said. “The first shipment could include up to one million doses.”

The timing of the Chinese shipment depends on how fast Hungarian health authorities authorize use of Sinopharm’s vaccine, which has been used to immunise some 20 million people, he added.

Gulyas said the second wave of the pandemic has peaked in Hungary and new infections have dropped but restrictions cannot be eased yet.

China approved the shot developed by Sinopharm’s BIBP in late December, its first COVID-19 vaccine for general public use.

No detailed efficacy data of the vaccine has been publicly released but BIBP has said the vaccine is 79.34% effective in preventing the disease based on interim data. Pakistan has already negotiated a supply deal for the vaccine.

The vaccine, along with another candidate developed by a Wuhan-based subsidiary of Sinopharm, is included in China’s emergency use programme launched in July, which targets limited groups of people facing high risk of virus exposure.

Since 11 November, all secondary schools have been closed in Hungary, as have hotels and restaurants except for takeaway meals, a 1900 GMT curfew has been in place, and gatherings have been banned.

https://www.euractiv.com/section/china/news/hungary-reaches-deal-to-buy-chinas-sinopharm-vaccine/1554908/

Edited by vememah
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ortak mi javio da je njegov drug vodio babu i dedu na vakcinaciju i neki sa spiska nisu dosli, pa su pitali njega dal hoce, i primio. 150% pouzdan info. valjda ono sto im ostane mora da se da tog dana ili sta vec. mozda da svracamo u nase domove zdravlja pred kraj dana?

  • Haha 2
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14 minutes ago, Tsai said:

ortak mi javio da je njegov drug vodio babu i dedu na vakcinaciju i neki sa spiska nisu dosli, pa su pitali njega dal hoce, i primio. 150% pouzdan info. valjda ono sto im ostane mora da se da tog dana ili sta vec. mozda da svracamo u nase domove zdravlja pred kraj dana?

pa jesu li punktovi u domovima zdravlja ?

 

a o tome je pričala ona žena, mikrobiolog iz Italije, oni tamo uvek naruče više ljudi, upravo da se ne bi događalo da se bace vakcine

ja sam nju slušajući, razumela da sve što se pripremi mora isti dan da se utroši

tako da verujem da je tačan taj info

Edited by dùda
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ovde je juce jedna bolnica u kraju dobila 1000 doza, a kako je bilo oko 800 clanova osoblja koje su vakcinisali, pozvali su lokalne doktore/zubare (i ostale frontline workers) da iskoriste tu razliku.


Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk

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22 hours ago, de Sisti said:

Na tviteru se pojavila informacija da su lekari dobili mejl da se vakcinacija predvidjena za 17.1. odlaze zbog nedostatka vakcina

 

Tačno je, moja bivša koleginica je u dz čukarica, otkazali su. A razlika je verovatno u familii političara i sl

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Quote

Exclusive: International COVID-19 vaccine poll shows higher mistrust of Russia, China shots

LONDON (Reuters) - People across the world are generally likely to say yes to getting a COVID-19 vaccine, but would be more distrustful of shots made in China or Russia than those developed in Germany or the United States, an international poll showed on Friday.

The survey, conducted by the polling company YouGov and shared exclusively with Reuters, found Britons and Danes were the most willing to take the COVID-19 vaccine when it becomes available to them, while the French and Poles were more likely to be hesitant.

The poll was based on questions put to almost 19,000 people.

It also found that willingness to take the COVID-19 vaccine has been improving in many countries in recent weeks, just as shots developed by companies in the United States, Russia, China, Germany and Britain were starting to be delivered and administered in countries across Europe, North America and Asia.

In Britain, 73% of people said they would get vaccinated, while in Denmark the number was 70%.

In the United States, however, just less than half of those surveyed said they would be willing to have a COVID-19 vaccine, a figure that has remained broadly stable since July.

More than a third of people surveyed in Poland and almost half in France - 37% and 48% respectively - said they would say no to a COVID-19 shot if offered it.

WAIT AND SEE
Confidence among populations about vaccines will be a key factor in governments’ efforts to curb the rate of infections in the year-long SARS-CoV-2 coronavirus pandemic, which has infected more than 92 million people worldwide and killed at least 1.98 million.

A study published by vaccine confidence researchers in November found that conspiracy theories and misinformation fuels mistrust and could push COVID-19 shot uptake rates below levels needed to protect communities against the disease.

Friday’s YouGov poll found that, while sizeable minorities in many countries said they would not take the COVID-19 vaccine now, most gave their reason as preferring to wait and see if the vaccines were safe, and few were driven by entrenched “anti-vaxxer” views.

In France, for example, the proportion of the population saying they’d refuse the vaccine because they were “opposed to vaccines in general” was highest at 9%, but still far lower than the percentage who would reject a COVID-19 vaccine specifically.

With COVID-19 vaccine production and delivery beginning to ramp up, the YouGov poll also surveyed attitudes to compulsory COVID-19 vaccination - a policy under discussion by some governments to try and get as many people as possible immunised.

Such a move was most popular in India at 77%, Indonesia at 71% and Mexico at 65%. Britons were split, with 40% supportive and 42% opposed, Americans tended to oppose the idea, at 46% compared with only 29% who would back mandatory vaccinations.

https://www.reuters.com/article/health-coronavirus-vaccines-attitudes/exclusive-international-covid-19-vaccine-poll-shows-higher-mistrust-of-russia-china-shots-idUSL8N2JQ17C

 

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Edited by vememah
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