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Turkey to start using Sputnik V vaccine this week

Turkey to start using Sputnik V vaccine this week

Turkey will offer Stupnik V as one of the vaccine choices starting this week. The first shipment of vaccine had arrived in recent weeks and was subject to final safety tests. It will join China’s CoronaVac and the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine available to the Turkish public. The Health Ministry, which sped up the inoculation drive with the arrival of new shipments, plans to further expand the campaign by deploying mobile crews that can offer jabs to people unable to go to hospitals and clinics.

The country plans to inoculate 70% of the population with two doses of vaccine within the next two months, amid concerns of a fourth wave of the pandemic stemming from variants. The Health Ministry has announced that 134 delta variant cases were reported in 16 provinces. It is a relatively low number, compared to the number of daily cases, which fluctuate around 5,000 nowadays. Since March 2020, more than 5.4 million cases were reported in the country while the total number of fatalities has exceeded 49,000. The delta variant mostly threatens those with single dose of the vaccine and those who were not administered jabs at all.

The Health Ministry is also considering shortening the time span between the two doses of vaccine. Turkey managed to surpass 1 million daily doses. As of Tuesday, the number of doses administered exceeded 48.8 million. But the number of daily doses occasionally drops, something tied to confusion among the public over vaccines and an outright anti-vaccination mindset among some. Anti-vaxxers are still a fringe group that thrive on social media. A gathering they held in Istanbul last week drew only dozens. But conspiracy theories on vaccines, including the claims that they alter people’s DNA and cause infertility, fuels vaccine hesitancy among the public. Studies show people between the ages of 20 and 35 were among those least interested in getting jabs and coincidentally, they are also most prolific social media users. The Health Ministry had recently enlisted celebrities for its vaccination campaigns and video ads featuring the likes of actors, singers and sports personalities aiming to persuade everyone to get a shot.

Figures point to a low interest in vaccination in the southeast, where the rate of people who had their first dose relative to the total population remained only at 19% and was even lower among those with two doses of vaccine. The Aegean region in the west, on the other hand, is among the most interested in vaccines. The vaccination rate of those with at least one dose in that region is 48% of the total population.
The vaccination campaign helped Turkey boost its standing among other countries amid the pandemic. A “COVID Resilience Ranking” published by Bloomberg put the country at the 14th spot among 53 countries, one spot lower than Singapore and one spot ahead of Saudi Arabia. The ranking demonstrates the “best and worst places to be” amid the pandemic and at a time of reopening in most countries. It aggregates a set of criteria, from the rate of people vaccinated against COVID-19 to the severity of lockdowns, flight capacities and other indicators such as quality of life and the severity of the pandemic.