Covid-19 wave looms in Europe amid vaccine fatigue and false sense of security

WHO data released late on Oct 5 showed that cases in the European Union reached 1.5 million last week. PHOTO: REUTERS

GENEVA - A new Covid-19 wave appears to be brewing in Europe as cooler weather arrives, with public health experts warning that vaccine fatigue and confusion over types of available vaccines will likely limit booster uptake.

Omicron subvariants BA.4 and BA.5 that dominated this summer are still behind the majority of infections, but newer Omicron subvariants are gaining ground.

Hundreds of new forms of Omicron are being tracked by scientists, World Health Organisation (WHO) officials said this week.

WHO data released late on Wednesday showed that cases in the European Union reached 1.5 million last week, up 8 per cent from the prior week, despite a dramatic fall in testing. Globally, case numbers continue to decline.

Hospitalisation numbers across many countries in the 27-nation bloc, as well as Britain, have gone up in recent weeks.

In the week ended Oct 4, Covid-19 hospital admissions with symptoms jumped nearly 32 per cent in Italy, while intensive care admissions rose about 21 per cent, compared to the week before, according to data compiled by independent scientific foundation Gimbe.

Over the same week, Covid-19 hospitalisations in Britain saw a 45 per cent increase versus the week earlier.

Omicron-adapted vaccines have launched in Europe as of September, with two types of shots addressing the BA.1 as well as the BA.4 and BA.5 subvariants made available alongside existing first-generation vaccines.

In Britain, only the BA.1-tailored shots have been given the green light.

European and British officials have endorsed the latest boosters only for a select groups of people, including the elderly and those with compromised immune systems. Complicating matters further is the "choice" of vaccine as a booster, which will likely add to confusion, public health experts said.

But willingness to get yet another shot, which could be a fourth or fifth for some, is wearing thin.

"For those who may be less concerned about their risk, the messaging that it is all over coupled with the lack of any major publicity campaign is likely to reduce uptake," said Dr Martin McKee, professor of European public health at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.

"So on balance I fear that uptake will be quite a bit lower," he said.

Dr Penny Ward, visiting professor in pharmaceutical medicine at King's College London, said: "Another confounder is that quite a high proportion of the population might have also had a Covid episode in recent months."

Some may erroneously feel that having had a complete primary course and then having fallen ill with Covid-19 means they will remain immune, she added.

Since Sept 5, when the roll-out of new vaccines began in the EU, about 40 million vaccine doses produced by Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna have been delivered to member states, according to data from the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control.

However, weekly vaccine doses administered in the EU were only between 1 million and 1.4 million during September, compared with 6-10 million per week during the year-earlier period, data from the centre showed.

Perhaps the biggest challenge to uptake is the perception that the pandemic is over, creating a false sense of security.

"There must be some complacency in that life seems to have gone back to normal, at least with regard to Covid, and people now have other financial and war-related worries," said Professor Adam Finn, chairman of ETAGE, an expert group advising the WHO on vaccine preventable diseases in Europe.

He added that some lawmakers, too, were dropping the ball.

Italy's Gimbe science foundation said the government, soon to be replaced after an election, was ill-prepared for the autumn-winter season, and highlighted that a publication on the government's management of the pandemic had been blocked.

The health ministry declined to comment.

Meanwhile, British officials last week warned that renewed circulation of flu and a resurgence in Covid-19 could pile pressure on the already stretched National Health Service. REUTERS

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