Israel's
president gets third COVID-19 shot, urges boosters for over-60s
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[July 30, 2021]
By Stephen Farrell
JERUSALEM (Reuters) - Israeli President
Isaac Herzog received a third shot of coronavirus vaccine on Friday,
kicking off a campaign to give booster doses to people aged over 60 as
part of efforts to slow the spread of the highly contagious Delta
variant.
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Herzog, 60, received a booster dose of the Pfizer/BioNTech COVID-19
vaccine at the Sheba Medical Center in Ramat Gan, near Tel Aviv.
He said he was proud to launch the booster vaccination initiative
"which is so vital to enable normal circumstances of life as much as
possible in this very challenging pandemic". Herzog's wife Michal
also received a shot.
The couple were accompanied by Prime Minister Naftali Bennett, who
urged the importance of booster shots in fighting the COVID-19
pandemic and pledged that Israel would share all the information it
gleans from the public inoculation rollout.
"Israel is a pioneer in going ahead with the third dose for older
people of the age of 60 and above. The fight against the COVID
pandemic is a global fight. The only way we can defeat COVID is
together," Bennett said.
The booster campaign, with shots administered by health maintenance
organisations, will effectively turn Israel into a testing ground
for a third dose before approval by the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration (FDA).
On the eve of the booster rollout Bennett said Israel had already
given 2,000 immunosuppressed people a third dose with no severe
adverse events.
His government hopes that stepped up inoculation efforts will help
avoid further costly lockdowns.
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Israel was a world leader in
the vaccination rollout, and around 57% of the
9.3 million population has been
double-vaccinated, rising to 87% of people in
their sixties and more than 90% of those over
70. Many seniors got their first
shots in December, January and February as they were regarded as the
most vulnerable sector of the population.
But since the emergence of the Delta variant, the health ministry
has twice reported a drop in the vaccine's efficacy against
infection and a slight decrease in its protection against severe
disease.
Daily new infections have spiked to more than 2,000, up from a
handful of cases per day a few months ago and about 160 people are
currently hospitalised with severe symptoms. More than 6,400 people
have died from the virus.
(Reporting by Stephen Farrell; Editing by Catherine Evans)
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