Russia's Sputnik V vaccination program has started, but it's facing resistance - Action News
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Russia's Sputnik V vaccination program has started, but it's facing resistance

Russia's mass vaccination program against the coronavirus has started, but it's running into resistance not from Western nations but from Russians. Many Russians who spoke with CBC News still aren't convinced a vaccine that was rushed to market is safe.

Vaccine hesitancy significant concern as Russia begins mass inoculation

A nurse at Clinic No. 68 in Moscow prepares the first of two doses of Sputnik V vaccine for volunteers in the country's national vaccination campaign. Tens of thousands of health care workers, teachers, military personnel and others with government connections had already taken the vaccine prior to the launch of the current campaign. (Corinne Seminoff/CBC)

As Russia's mass COVID-19 vaccination campaign got underway this week, thousands of Russians rolled up their sleeves and volunteered to be among the first to get their arms jabbed with a dose of Sputnik V.

Many others, however,appear to be holding back to see how things turn out for those who did.

"People are worried because they don't understand how the vaccine is made, and they see a lot of controversy in the media,"said Dr. Yevgeny Timakov,a Moscow-based infectious disease specialist.

"Most of my patients about 80 per cent want to get vaccinated, but of those [only] 20 per cent are ready to do it right now," he told CBCNews in an interview.

His observations reflect what might be a broad public hesitancy to takea vaccine that has been developed,approved and delivered to the public in a record-shattering time frame.

Dr. Olga Moskova gets vaccinated against the coronavirus. She told CBC News that while the vaccine may not yet be perfect, getting it is 'the right thing to do' for now. (Corinne Seminoff/CBC)

What Timakov is hearing from his patients echoes the findings of a public opinion survey done bythe independent Lavada Institute in October.Itsuggests vaccine distrust among Russians has increased as the pandemic has worsened, with 59 per centof those surveyed suggesting they are unwilling to get vaccinated against the coronavirus, whichcauses theCOVID-19 illness.

Another survey published around the same time bythe state-run RIA Novosti news agency reported that more than 70 per centof Russians did not plan to get vaccinated.

Still awaiting full Phase 3 results

Russia's vaccine, whose name is meant to invoke memories of Soviet-era success in space, was the first in the world to be registered in August and since then, tens of thousands of health-care workers,teachers,military personnel and others with government connections have taken it.

However,the vaccine's initial success was championed on the basis of results involving a small sample of less than 100 volunteers.

Subsequent results derived from larger Phase 3trials have validated those early findings, but Sputnik V's developer has yet to publish those fullresults.

Pfizer-BioNTech published its safety data this week as part of its approval process with the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and had its vaccine approved in Canada Wednesday.

Vials of Sputnik V at BIOCAD, a biotechnology company in Saint Petersburg. While some in the West have criticized the lack of transparency around the Russian vaccine's development, others say the underlying science is sound and in line with other COVID-19 vaccines. (Anton Vaganov/Reuters)

"People are wary of vaccination and are waiting for the end of clinical trials and [to]see that the vaccine works. All this they will see in time," said Timakov,who supports the vaccine and is encouraging Russians to take it.

Its maker,the Gamaleya Research Institute of Epidemiology and Microbiology,has said it hopes more than two million Russians can be vaccinated by the end of the month although it's unclear if that target can be met.

Russia repeatedly promised a national vaccination program throughout the fall, but production delays kept pushing the start date back.

'The right thing to do'

CBC News visited one of the 70 hospitals and clinics in the Moscow area that began administering the vaccine this week as part of the national immunization program.

Many of those who signed up to be among the first to get inoculated were health-care workers,at higher risk of contracting the virus.

"You need to get vaccinated because you need to keep working," said Dr. Olga Maskova.

Like everyone else who received the vaccine, Maskovawas handed an information sheet listing the possible short-term side effects, includingchills,fever and skin irritation.

'My role as a doctor is to explain the risks there will be if they don't take the vaccine,' says Natalia Kuzinkova, head physician at Clinic No. 68 (Corinne Seminoff/CBC)

"I'm absolutely convinced that this is the right step," she said. "Later, the vaccine might be perfected,and maybe there will be other vaccines, but I think this is the right thing to do at this time."

Sputnik V is an adenovirus-based platform that uses a modified common cold virus to trigger the body's immune system to produce antibodies against the coronavirus and requires a booster shot 21 days after the first injection.

It's a similarprocess to the one used by Oxford University and AstraZeneca for its vaccine.

India, South Korea, U.A.E. sign on for Sputnik

Western experts have been split on the Russian vaccine, with some bemoaning the lack of transparency of the trials and the reliance on early data to draw sweeping conclusions about its effectiveness.

Others, however, argue the science behind the vaccine is proven, and it will likely make an important contribution to fighting the virus globally once it is in widespread use.

Natalia Kuzinkova,the chief doctor at Clinic No. 68, the facilityCBC News visited, said she understands there may be reticence to be among the first to get vaccinated but thatthe risks of waiting are far greater.

"My role as a doctor is to explain the risks there will be if they don't take the vaccine," she said. "Yes,I hear the opinions, but my responsibility is to tell them that if they haven't been sick yet, they could still get sick and die."

The Kremlin has fought an intense global public relations campaign to sell its vaccine to COVID-weary customers abroad but also to demonstrate Russian superiority in an area that was once a point of pride for the former Soviet Union: vaccine production.

Few Western governments, with the notable exceptionof Hungary in the European Union,have thus far expressed an interest in the Russian vaccine. However,dozens ofnations in other parts of the world, including India,South Korea and the United Arab Emirates, have signed agreements to buy it.

The Sputnik V vaccine arrives at Ferenc Liszt International Airport in Budapest in November. Hungary is the only EU country to express interest in the Russian vaccine thus far. (Matyas Borsos/Hungarian Foreign Ministry/Reuters)

Process moving too fast, say some

While some of the concerns over the virus are clearly rooted in the adversarial nature of the relationship betweenPutin and his counterpartsin Europe and North America, they have also been amplified by Russia's own bragging about the vaccine's success and the timing of proclamations that appeared designed to one-up announcements by Western vaccine makers.

The CBC News team in Moscow visited the Kuznetsky Most pedestrian mall a few blocks from the Kremlin to ask people at random if they planned to sign up for the vaccination.

Most told us they would not.

"I don't trust this vaccine," said Artyom Bagamayev."The trials usually take many years, but here, it's just a bit too fast."

"In the past,it was an arms race, but now, it's a biological one, a vaccine race."

Natalia Panfilova agreed.

"You can't produce an effective vaccine in such a short period of time and test it and say it's effective," she said. "I don't understand if it works or if it doesn't work or how effective it is."

A medical worker receives their Sputnik V vaccination. Phase 3 trials of the vaccine are not yet complete. (Corinne Seminoff/CBC )

Putin not yet vaccinated

The potential for vaccine hesitancy is clearly not unique to Russia, but it may be accentuated by a longstanding lack of trust in the country's health-care system.

Hospitals in many parts of the country are being overwhelmed by coronavirus cases, and social media has been inundated with videos shot by patients showing deplorable conditions.

So far during this second wave of coronavirus cases,Russian authorities in most cities,including the capital, Moscow,have been reluctant to invoke lockdowns because of the heavy economic toll it mightinflict on an already struggling economy.

The severity of the COVID-19 outbreak, with more than 500 deaths a day,also makes getting a large public buy-in to the vaccine program even more essential if the virus is to be brought under control.

While many prominent Russians have been shown on TV getting their vaccinations,the most prominent person in the country,and the vaccine's biggest cheerleader,so far has not.

The Kremlin says Putin has not taken the two doses of the vaccineand has not yet offered a time frame on when he will do so.

WATCH | Why some Russians are wary ofgetting the Sputnik V vaccine:

Rollout of Russia's COVID-19 vaccine met with skepticism from some Russians

4 years ago
Duration 2:01
Russias Sputnik V COVID-19 vaccine is now being administered to the general population despite still being in Phase 3 trials. One Russian doctor says only 20 per cent of his patients want to be first in line to get it because of concerns over safety and efficacy. Some in the West have also been skeptical, but scientists in the U.K. have said the results of the Sputnik trials have been consistent with those of other vaccines.

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