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COVID-19 VACCINES

Italy to offer Covid booster jabs to all over-40s from December

Amid concerns about rising Covid cases, the Italian health minister said third vaccine doses would soon be offered to more age groups.

A nurse prepares a Covid vaccine dose.
Booster shots of Covid vaccines are recommended to prevent waning immunity amid a rise in contagions. Photo: Theo Rouby/AFP

Health Minister Roberto Speranza said on Wednesday that third doses will be extended to those aged between 40-60 from December 1st.

He said administering more booster shots was “absolutely strategic for our vaccine campaign”.

READ ALSO: Italy’s fourth Covid wave ‘can be reduced’, says health expert

“We started with the immuno-compromised, the frail, health workers, over 60s and those who had J&J who can have booster shots after six months,” Speranza said in answer to a question in Parliament, news agency Ansa reports.

Health authorities are reportedly aiming to start offering the booster to all age groups from early 2022.

The government is pushing to speed up the administration of third doses – as well as aiming to have 90 percent of the population fully vaccinated – as Covid infections and hospitalisation rates rise.

READ ALSO: Why are Covid infections in Italy rising?

Though the numbers are rising around Europe and beyond, the increases in Italy have so far been relatively small and authorities are not currently planning to bring in any new restrictions.

However, politicians and health experts maintain that more vaccine coverage is needed to keep the situation under control.

Boosters are recommended to prevent immunity from waning in people who had their first jabs in early 2021.

Walter Ricciardi, a professor of hygiene and preventive medicine and a health advisor to the Italian government, on Monday echoed other experts in saying Italy needs to offer third doses to a wider section of the population as soon as possible in order to contain the fourth wave.

“If we continue to use protection, if we have third doses and adequately manage testing and tracing in schools, it will remain a small wave, not an overwhelming one like in other countries,” he said.

As of Wednesday, some 45 million people or almost 84 percent of the Italian population over the age of 12 are fully vaccinated, and just over two million have received booster shots, health ministry data showed.

Member comments

  1. But where exactly are these boosters available and, of course, please clarify the population who can actually get them? As a pending resident and not yet registered with the national health services, it’s difficult to find even the most scant of information about where to go and from whom to request the 3rd “punto.”

    A friend said, “Oh there’s this hospital at the end of the tram line…” Is that it? Where to go by word of mouth and by speculation?

    Any help would be most appreciated, especially with travel restrictions tightening for those without this booster.

    1. Hi,

      That’s a good question. We’re working on a longer article at the moment with more information about this, but the system varies depending on your local health authority. If you don’t have an Italian doctor and are not signed up with the national health service we’d advise checking your regional authority’s website for information or contacting a vaccination centre in your area. We’ll publish any further information as we get it.

      Best wishes,
      – Clare

      1. My thanks to Clare and the crew for providing cogent, clear and on-point information regarding all things living, working and staying healthy in Italy.

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COVID-19 RULES

Italy allows suspended anti-vax doctors to return to work

Italian heathcare staff suspended over their refusal to be vaccinated against Covid-19 can now return to work, Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni confirmed on Monday.

Italy allows suspended anti-vax doctors to return to work

Italy become the first country in Europe to make it obligatory for healthcare workers to be vaccinated, ruling in 2021 that they must have the jab or be transferred to other roles or suspended without pay.

That obligation had been set to expire in December, but was brought forward to Tuesday due to “a shortage of medical and health personnel”, Health Minister Orazio Schillaci said.

READ ALSO: Is Italy’s government planning to scrap all Covid measures?

Italy was the first European country to be hit hard by the coronavirus pandemic in early 2020, and has since registered nearly 180,000 deaths.

Schillaci first announced the plan to scrap the rule on Friday in a statement saying data showed the virus’ impact on hospitals  “is now limited”.

Those who refuse vaccination will be “reintegrated” into the workforce before the rule expires at the end of this year, as part of what the minister called a “gradual return to normality”.

Meloni said the move, which has been criticised by the centre-left as a win for anti-vax campaigners, would mean some 4,000 healthcare workers can return to work.

This includes some 1,579 doctors and dentists refusing vaccination, according to records at the end of October, representing 0.3 percent of all those registered with Italy’s National Federation of the Orders of Physicians, Surgeons and Dentists (Fnomceo) 

Meloni’s post-fascist Brothers of Italy party railed against the way Mario Draghi’s government handled the pandemic, when it was the main opposition party, and she promised to use her first cabinet meetings to mark a clear break in policies with her predecessor.

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