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		Italy's old pay high price for regional vaccine lottery
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		 [April 09, 2021] 
		By Crispian Balmer and Angelo Amante 
 ROME (Reuters) - Agostino Airaudo, 86, died 
		of the coronavirus on March 21. Ninety minutes earlier he had received 
		an SMS telling him that, after weeks of waiting, he had got an 
		appointment for a vaccine.
 
 Ten days later, his 82-year-old wife Michela also died of the disease.
 
 Unlike many other European countries, Italy did not give automatic 
		precedence to its army of pensioners when it launched its inoculation 
		campaign in December, even though they were bearing the brunt of the 
		disease.
 
 The failure to provide swifter protection has cost thousands of lives, 
		experts say, and stoked anger about a fragmented health system under 
		which regions take most of the decisions and the central government has 
		struggled to impose a clear strategy.
 
 "People could have been saved," said Giorgio Airaudo, the son of 
		Agostino and Michela, and the head of Italy's powerful FIOM 
		metalworkers' union in the northern region of Piedmont.
 
		
		 
		
 "As soon as the vaccines arrived, there was no justification for not 
		giving priority to fragile people and the elderly...," he told Reuters 
		by telephone.
 
 "But this did not happen. The government made suggestions and each 
		region did as they pleased."
 
 More than 110,000 people have died of COVID-19 in Italy, the world's 
		seventh highest tally. Their average age was 81, and 86% of them were 70 
		or over, data from the ISS national health institute shows.
 
 Many countries, including Britain and the United States, vaccinated old 
		people first, recognising their great vulnerability.
 
 Italy's government also said the over 80s should get priority, but a 
		haphazard rollout has allowed professionals including lawyers, 
		magistrates and university professors to move to the head of the queue 
		in many places.
 
 As the death rate has fallen in much of Europe thanks to the early 
		impact of the vaccines, Italy's has stayed stubbornly high, and its 
		average daily toll of 431 during the past week was the highest on the 
		continent, according to Reuters data.
 
 Acknowledging the problem, Prime Minister Mario Draghi - the epitome of 
		measured calm during his eight-year stint as head of the European 
		Central Bank - on Thursday made an impassioned plea to fellow Italians 
		to wait their turn.
 
 "With what conscience does someone jump the line knowing that they are 
		leaving a person who is over 75 or fragile exposed to the real risk of 
		dying?" Draghi told reporters.
 
 "Stop vaccinating people under 60," he said, raising his voice.
 
		
		 
		
 'DEATH, PAIN AND GRIEF'
 
 At the start of this year, Italy's 20 regions focused almost exclusively 
		on protecting health workers, even those in their 20s with no contact 
		with patients. Most places did not begin mass vaccinations for over 80s 
		until mid-February.
 
 By that stage, France and Germany had already given a first dose to 20% 
		of their over 80s.
 
 Italy has since caught up with the EU average, with data from the 
		European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control showing it had given 
		at least one shot to 62% of its over 80s. But just 13.4% of people in 
		their 70s have had a first dose, the lowest rate in Europe after 
		Bulgaria.
 
 Regional governors say they followed government guidelines and blame 
		delays on slower-than-expected vaccine deliveries.
 
 They also say they were blindsided in January when the national drug 
		regulator advised that the AstraZeneca/Oxford shot should only be used 
		for the under 55s.
 
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			A funeral service worker looks at coffins of two victims of 
			coronavirus disease (COVID-19) during a burial ceremony in the 
			southern town of Cisternino, Italy March 30, 2020. 
			REUTERS/Alessandro Garofalo 
            
			 
            They had planned to give this shot to older residents and had to 
			change strategy. Now guidance has swung round again with a 
			recommendation that it should be used only for over-60s after 
			concern emerged that it may cause rare blood clots in young adults.
 Matteo Villa, a researcher with the ISPI think-tank, says other EU 
			nations facing the same issues were more agile. His analysis 
			suggests Italy could have saved 11,900 lives had it focused more on 
			the elderly.
 
 "Central government did not control the situation and then, 
			amazingly, many of the regions did not prepare carefully for the 
			rollout," Villa told Reuters.
 
 He said some regions competed with each other to see who could 
			administer the most shots, and found it easier to corral health 
			workers than the elderly.
 
 "This isn't a race ...This is a situation where there is death, pain 
			and grief," said the union boss Airaudo.
 
 His parents lived in Piedmont, which is centred on Turin. They both 
			had serious ailments and had registered with their doctor for the 
			vaccine. An algorithm adopted by the region decides who gets a 
			vaccine, and when.
 
 Piedmont health officials did not respond to questions over why they 
			had not received timely shots.
 
 'AN INCREDIBLE MESS'
 
 Adding to the confusion, each region uses its own booking system.
 
            
			 
            
 Franco Perco, 81, lives in the central Marche region, a COVID-19 
			hotspot. He is still waiting for a vaccine appointment despite 
			numerous phone calls to helplines and efforts to book online.
 
 "I feel very scared. There is no clarity," said Perco, the former 
			head of one of Italy's major national parks. "I am going out as 
			little as possible."
 
 Under the constitution, Italian regions have broad autonomy over 
			healthcare decision-making, even during a pandemic.
 
 In Tuscany, Abruzzo and Sicily, magistrates and lawyers were given 
			priority status. In the southern region of Molise, journalists were 
			allowed early vaccinations. Lax supervision in Sicily meant one 
			priest was able to get his congregation vaccinated regardless of 
			age.
 
 "It created an incredible mess. It has served as a lesson for us to 
			be more careful," said Angelo Aliquò, the health agency director 
			general in the Sicilian city of Ragusa.
 
 Health undersecretary Andrea Costa, who took office in February, 
			told Reuters that mistakes had been made in not clearly identifying 
			priority groups.
 
 "There will be time in the future to analyse what happened, but now 
			we need to achieve as soon as possible immunization which will allow 
			a return to normal life," he said.
 
 Angered by the sudden death of both his parents, Airaudo hopes there 
			will be a reckoning.
 
            
			 
			"I always thought that decentralisation was about being close to the 
			people. Instead, today we have confusion, difference, injustice and 
			delays," he said.
 (Reporting by Crispian Balmer and Angelo Amante; editing by John 
			Stonestreet)
 
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