Berliner Boersenzeitung - In vaccination champ Brazil, many have stopped getting shots

EUR -
AED 4.368331
AFN 78.504542
ALL 96.777801
AMD 449.404803
ANG 2.129248
AOA 1090.744922
ARS 1710.125687
AUD 1.715529
AWG 2.141047
AZN 2.02164
BAM 1.958436
BBD 2.391068
BDT 145.265496
BGN 1.997562
BHD 0.448432
BIF 3498.561256
BMD 1.189471
BND 1.506577
BOB 8.221064
BRL 6.273982
BSD 1.187168
BTN 107.887193
BWP 15.624568
BYN 3.385227
BYR 23313.627183
BZD 2.387663
CAD 1.630285
CDF 2622.783306
CHF 0.92093
CLF 0.026091
CLP 1029.784301
CNY 8.271996
CNH 8.267339
COP 4388.849791
CRC 587.470855
CUC 1.189471
CUP 31.520976
CVE 110.413593
CZK 24.261814
DJF 211.41007
DKK 7.467492
DOP 74.337543
DZD 153.628484
EGP 55.941647
ERN 17.842062
ETB 184.546163
FJD 2.628139
FKP 0.868481
GBP 0.867541
GEL 3.199886
GGP 0.868481
GHS 12.946423
GIP 0.868481
GMD 87.434955
GNF 10398.644674
GTQ 9.111262
GYD 248.384272
HKD 9.278639
HNL 31.485496
HRK 7.538384
HTG 155.582841
HUF 381.740417
IDR 19901.927634
ILS 3.69333
IMP 0.868481
INR 109.057794
IQD 1558.206715
IRR 50106.45657
ISK 145.198734
JEP 0.868481
JMD 186.87521
JOD 0.843365
JPY 182.814507
KES 153.442216
KGS 104.018
KHR 4793.567466
KMF 496.611855
KPW 1070.546787
KRW 1716.144602
KWD 0.364704
KYD 0.989331
KZT 596.522793
LAK 25612.25332
LBP 101759.225276
LKR 367.56157
LRD 219.635583
LSL 19.061283
LTL 3.512198
LVL 0.719499
LYD 7.496932
MAD 10.856893
MDL 20.027785
MGA 5358.565244
MKD 61.625714
MMK 2497.947354
MNT 4240.623218
MOP 9.535032
MRU 47.461304
MUR 54.145151
MVR 18.388851
MWK 2061.353348
MXN 20.619547
MYR 4.701383
MZN 75.828729
NAD 19.061251
NGN 1677.890894
NIO 43.648383
NOK 11.589353
NPR 172.613496
NZD 1.987968
OMR 0.457351
PAB 1.187198
PEN 3.98651
PGK 5.15176
PHP 70.259635
PKR 332.436604
PLN 4.202567
PYG 7978.569766
QAR 4.331279
RON 5.095338
RSD 117.411466
RUB 90.844304
RWF 1728.301036
SAR 4.460484
SBD 9.612075
SCR 16.545507
SDG 715.469085
SEK 10.603871
SGD 1.506477
SHP 0.892411
SLE 29.011581
SLL 24942.606537
SOS 677.28871
SRD 45.348593
STD 24619.643503
STN 24.562571
SVC 10.38798
SYP 13155.041117
SZL 19.055345
THB 36.942552
TJS 11.082701
TMT 4.175042
TND 3.402184
TOP 2.86396
TRY 51.626955
TTD 8.067858
TWD 37.388652
TZS 3038.472124
UAH 51.18269
UGX 4208.663966
USD 1.189471
UYU 44.550142
UZS 14410.438518
VES 426.082277
VND 31085.629225
VUV 142.435928
WST 3.246414
XAF 656.82438
XAG 0.010627
XAU 0.000234
XCD 3.214604
XCG 2.139579
XDR 0.816875
XOF 657.183789
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.667624
ZAR 19.078757
ZMK 10706.598345
ZMW 23.179708
ZWL 383.009104
  • CMSD

    -0.0150

    24.145

    -0.06%

  • CMSC

    0.0200

    23.8

    +0.08%

  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • NGG

    1.4100

    83.99

    +1.68%

  • GSK

    0.7950

    51.115

    +1.56%

  • RIO

    1.4000

    91.87

    +1.52%

  • RELX

    -0.8100

    38.7

    -2.09%

  • AZN

    1.1900

    95.42

    +1.25%

  • BCE

    0.3900

    25.54

    +1.53%

  • BCC

    -1.2450

    82.155

    -1.52%

  • RYCEF

    0.0000

    17.12

    0%

  • BTI

    0.7700

    59.76

    +1.29%

  • JRI

    -0.0150

    13.715

    -0.11%

  • VOD

    0.2050

    14.435

    +1.42%

  • BP

    0.5100

    37.27

    +1.37%

  • RBGPF

    -0.8300

    82.4

    -1.01%

In vaccination champ Brazil, many have stopped getting shots
In vaccination champ Brazil, many have stopped getting shots / Photo: Carl DE SOUZA - AFP

In vaccination champ Brazil, many have stopped getting shots

Two years after Brazil began emerging from its pandemic horror show thanks to a massive immunization campaign, officials face a paradoxical predicament: vaccination rates have plunged, and not just for Covid-19.

Text size:

The troubling trend has left millions exposed to once-eradicated diseases.

Doctors, public officials and UNICEF have sounded the alarm over collapsing immunization rates in Brazil, where overall vaccination coverage has fallen from an impressive 95 percent in 2015 to just 68 percent last year, according to official figures.

For polio, the figure fell from 85 percent to 68 percent, triggering warnings that the disease could make a comeback in Brazil, where it was eradicated in 1989.

The figures are similar for other vaccines, allowing diseases to spread. Measles, officially eliminated in Brazil in 2016, returned two years later. There are fears diphtheria is making a resurgence, too.

Health experts say vaccine hesitancy is a growing problem worldwide. But it is particularly worrying in Brazil, a sprawling country of 203 million people that until recently was hailed as a champion of mass vaccination drives.

Then an anti-vax movement started spreading around 2016, soon gaining outsize influence via a powerful ally: far-right leader Jair Bolsonaro, president from 2019 to 2022, who refused to be vaccinated against Covid-19, joking the jab could "turn you into an alligator."

"It's very sad to see how a country whose vaccination programs set an example for the world can suddenly suffer from an anti-vaccine movement," Natalia Pasternak, head of the Question of Science Institute (IQC), a public policy think tank, told AFP.

"It's very sad to see how 50 years of work can be so easily destroyed in three."

- Success story undone -

Covid-19 highlighted the shots-in-arms capacities of Brazil's struggling but lauded universal public health system.

Back in 2020, some of the most haunting images of the pandemic were of mass graves and corpses piled in refrigerator trucks in places such as Manaus, in northern Brazil, whose overwhelmed hospitals ran out of oxygen.

Then new images started emerging in 2021, of public health workers turning Rio de Janeiro's carnival parade venue into a drive-through immunization center, or boating deep into the Amazon rainforest to administer vaccines in Indigenous villages.

Experts credit the campaign's success with stopping a far bigger tragedy in Brazil, where more than 700,000 people have died of Covid-19, second only to the United States.

Despite a slow start -- widely blamed on Bolsonaro -- Brazil had by early last year vaccinated 93 percent of adults against Covid-19.

Then rates fell, not only for Covid-19 vaccines but across the board.

- The 'infodemic' -

Many factors are driving the decline, experts say.

They include failure to catch up on vaccines delayed during the pandemic, inaccessible health care and declining awareness of the dangers of once-ubiquitous diseases.

But experts say a new element is making things much worse: the toxic mix of politics, polarization and disinformation that exploded during the pandemic and is increasingly familiar worldwide.

In Brazil, despite Bolsonaro losing a divisive 2022 election to veteran leftist Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, the anti-vax movement still thrives.

"We're facing a post-trust scenario, in which families are being attacked by disinformation and lies. It's not just the occasional fake news story, it's very structured," said Isabella Ballalai of the Brazilian Immunization Society.

"The consequences of that 'infodemic' will be worse than the pandemic itself."

Brazilian Health Minister Nisia Trindade says the government is evaluating how to punish doctors spreading anti-vax disinformation.

"Criminal fake news is sowing doubt and fueling vaccine hesitancy," she told AFP.

- Going local -

A recent survey by the Brazilian Pediatrics Society (SBP) and IQC found that doctors said parents' most common reasons for not vaccinating their children were fears of side effects and mistrust of vaccines.

Experts say health workers are desperate for reliable information to counter the flood of anti-vax disinformation.

Pasternak, whose organization is working on creating just that, says health officials also need to think locally.

"Studies show the best way to convince people to get vaccinated is working with local leaders... People listen to those they trust: pastors, community leaders," she said.

But reversing the trend will not be easy, Pasternak admitted.

"We have lots of work to do."

(T.Renner--BBZ)