Italy’s ‘green pass’ boosts vaccine uptake while
the right grumbles
For now, regions are posting a jump in vaccination
appointments.
BY HANNAH
ROBERTS
August 6,
2021 4:41 pm
ROME —
Getting between Italians and their morning trip to the espresso bar is no joke.
But Prime
Minister Mario Draghi has done exactly that as he attempts to strong-arm
undecided Italians into getting vaccinated — and keep ahead of a surge of
COVID-19 cases resulting from summer holiday mixing and travel.
Starting
Friday, Italians need a pass certifying immunity to sit down inside coffee bars
and restaurants as well as access to venues such as cinemas, museums, pools and
gyms. The requirement is waived for outdoor dining or buying a coffee at the
counter. The "green pass" will also be required, from September on,
to use long-distance transit and attend universities. When schools reopen, all
teachers must have the pass or face suspension without pay.
For now,
the nudge, or rather shove, seems to be having the desired effect, with regions
posting a jump in vaccination appointments from 15 to 200 percent, according to
Il Sole 24 Ore. Meanwhile, a survey by pollster Nando Pagnoncelli pointed to
broad support, with only a quarter of respondents saying they are somewhat or
very against the measure.
But those
who are opposed are waging a noisy campaign, calling the rules
unconstitutional, discriminatory and an assault on individual freedom. Protests
were held in 12 Italian cities last weekend, with people bearing slogans such
as "Born free and we’ll die free" and "Passport of
slavery." This movement is also gaining traction on the right, as multiple
cities get ready for elections this fall.
The
anti-green pass camp includes its share of conspiracy theorists and
libertarians, but many are owners of bars and restaurants, who say the green
pass is an extra burden on top of the strict guidelines already in place, like
reduced capacity. Further restrictions would damage their relationship with
regular customers, they say. And small local events such as village food
festivals, known as sagre, are likely to be canceled because of logistical
difficulties.
At the
L’Angolo bar near Rome’s San Giovanni square, owner Sabrina Pieroni juggled
customers and cappuccinos on Friday morning as one of her employees checked the
green passes using the health ministry’s app.
"We
are the sector that has suffered the most in the pandemic," she said.
"It’s a problem for us. Anything I have to check means losing time. It’s
not pleasant to ask regular customers for their documents, like a policeman,
and it definitely won’t be pleasant if I have to ask them to leave."
"I
didn’t choose that path in life," she added.
Delta
rising
Italy is
facing the same challenge seen by governments around the world, as policymakers
become creative in encouraging citizens to get vaccinated while the Delta
variant surges. In this case, Italy has followed France’s lead, nudging the
unsure by threatening their lifestyle rather than dangling U.S.-style
incentives or cash payments.
Under the
new rules, adults and teenagers will be required to prove immunity from
COVID-19 by showing one of the following: A digital or paper document that
indicates they have at least one dose of a recognized vaccine; documentation
they had COVID-19 within the past six months; or a negative test result in the
past 48 hours. Customers breaking the rules risk a fine, while businesses can
be closed for up to 10 days.
Some
businesses are determined to resist. In Borgetto, in Palermo, a sign outside a
gym reads: "Here we do not ask for the green pass. You got it? Good. You
don't have it? It's O.K. anyway."
In the
beach town of Alghero in Sardinia, a rebellious bar owner, Gianfranco Passero,
hung out a star of David, with a message: "Since 1961, today, tomorrow,
always, everyone can come in."
The green
pass is a deprivation of rights and a reminder of the segregation enforced by
fascist Italy’s racial laws against Jews, he said.
"I am
offering solidarity to those who freely and legitimately choose not to get
vaccinated and not get the green pass," he said. He already had fewer clients
that day, chalking it up to the unwillingness of people "to get a test
every 48 hours just to go to the bar."
The
challenge for Passero and other diehard opponents: The summer and travel season
is kicking up case numbers just as vaccinations have slowed down — a pattern
seen across Europe.
In Italy,
2.7 million people over 60 are still not fully vaccinated, according to the
health think tank GIMBE. Weekly case totals have been rising since lockdown
eased at the end of June, from 5,000 to 38,000, while the percentage of people
testing positive has risen from 2 to 11 percent. The number of intensive care
beds occupied by COVID-19 patients has also risen, with the seven-day rolling
average jumping from 5 a day in early July to 21.
It doesn’t
help that the southern regions of Italy — which are most popular with
vacationers — are also the most diffident about vaccines. In Sicily, only 51
percent of the population is fully inoculated compared to 59 percent of those
in Lombardy. Especially concerning is that 24 percent of Sicilians over 80
still haven’t completed the vaccine cycle.
Some
vaccine skepticism stems from deep-seated distrust of government, the rural
character of the region, and the fact that it wasn't as hard-hit by COVID-19 as
the north, say public health experts. Another reason is the scare prompted by
the confused messaging around the Oxford/AstraZeneca vaccine.
But now,
with its COVID-19 hospitalization rate the highest in the country, Sicily is at
risk of returning to a partial lockdown. In response, its government has
introduced a raft of incentives, including prioritization of residents of its
smallest islands; "bring your nonni" events that let young people get
jabbed if they bring an elderly person; and "aperivax" drinks
evenings.
Jabs with a
side of politics
Italy’s
trust in vaccines was already relatively weak by European standards before the
pandemic. A long-discredited paper linking the measles vaccine to autism was
one factor, but even after it was debunked, rumors around immunization
continued to spread, causing vaccination rates to fall so much that a measles
outbreak erupted in 2017.
Another
factor was that one of the parties in power, the anti-establishment 5Star
Movement, long drew support from vaccine-hesitant groups, with one of its MPs,
Sara Cunial, even comparing vaccinations to "a free genocide." But
the party has generally shifted to a more moderate stance, while Cunial has
been suspended.
These days,
most political opposition to the green pass is coming from the right. Giorgia
Meloni, leader of the main opposition party, the extreme right Brothers of
Italy, tweeted in July that it was "the final step towards the realization
of an Orwellian society."
Last week,
the Brothers of Italy occupied parliament in protest, forcing the sitting to be
suspended. A video of MP and former basketball player Federico Mollicone
dodging stewards during the protest went viral.
"We
are not anti-vaccination, but the green pass law is an indirect obligation that
amounts to blackmail," he said later. "If you are a family of four
going for a pizza and you have to buy four tests, that’s €50 on top of your
dinner. So you won't go."
Meloni’s
competitor on the right, Matteo Salvini, has come under pressure after his
League party was overtaken by Brothers of Italy in the polls — and has
attempted to shout even louder.
Unlike the
Brothers of Italy, however, the League is part of Draghi’s grand coalition.
When he made the announcement in July, Draghi attempted to bring Salvini to
heel, quipping: “The appeal not to get vaccinated is an appeal to die,
basically.”
Polls
suggest that a majority of Salvini and Meloni supporters actually back the
green pass. For his part, Salvini has attempted to play up the business angle.
He claimed victory Friday by boasting the League had prevented hotels from
being affected by the rules, and that families wouldn't see vacations ruined
because they have the option to get tested instead of getting a vaccine.
Still, with
local elections in October in major cities, including Rome and Milan, the two
right-wing parties seem determined to court, or at least not alienate, the
vaccine-skeptical vote.
While 11-13
percent of Italians are largely opposed to getting the vaccine, the figure is
much higher among voters on the right, according to research by Demos. Its
surveys show 20-23 percent of those voters opposed to compulsory vaccines.
Fabrizio
Masia, director of polling agency Emg Acqua, claims this contingent of skeptics
could represent as many six million votes in a likely electorate of around 30
million, "certainly not insignificant." But how Italy's parties try
to exploit the issue may well depend on how divisive it is in the coming months
— especially as the weather gets colder, social life moves indoors and
conditions become more favorable for another wave.
This
article is part of POLITICO’s premium policy service: Pro Health Care. From
drug pricing, EMA, vaccines, pharma and more, our specialized journalists keep
you on top of the topics driving the health care policy agenda. Email
pro@politico.eu for a complimentary trial.
Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário