Dr. Djerlek finds out if lists are made of those who refuse to shed!



[ad_1]

HERE'S WHAT HAPPENS IF YOU DON'T GET VACCINED: Dr. Djerlek finds out if lists are made of those who refuse to get vaccinated!

Illustration, Photo: Shutterstock

BELGRADE – In five days of vaccination against the coronavirus in Serbia, 854 users of gerontology centers received the first dose of the vaccine, the Secretary of State in the Ministry of Health, Mirsad Djerlek, reported today.

Djerlek told Television Prva that some of those vaccinated against the corona virus reported mild redness and a mild headache, which disappeared within a few hours.

Mirsad Đerlek
photo: Tanjug Nikola Andjic

Djerlek said there were some in gerontology centers who did not want to receive the vaccine at their own risk. He stressed that “there will be no databases of people who refuse to receive the vaccine, but by law there is a database of people who receive the vaccine.”

On Wednesday, vaccination will continue in Mataruška Banja, in Kruševac, and on December 31 in Šabac and Smederevo, and vaccination will continue during the holidays, Đerlek said.

“The hospitals are full, the intensive care units are full, we need to consume this contingent as soon as possible,” Djerlek said.

He expects 4,875 doses of Pfizer vaccines to be consumed in early January. Djerlek said that it will be possible to choose who wants to receive a vaccine from which manufacturer, when there is more than one manufacturer, and that care will be taken that everyone receives a different dose of vaccine from the same manufacturer, as was the first dose during vaccination.

“We will not administer different doses of the vaccine. That cannot happen, we will be very careful to receive doses of the same vaccine,” Djerlek said.

“The day before we go to the gerontology center, the immunization coordinators make lists, there are forms and written consent for vaccination. Those who do not want to are responsible for their health, we are not going to force anyone to receive the vaccine” Djerlek said.

He said the goal is to vaccinate as many people as possible as soon as possible, for which health care is prepared “organizationally and with staff”, but that it is “ungrateful to predict what is the date” when the vaccination will be completed.

Illustration
Illustrationphoto: Shutterstock

Djerlek said that so far between 25 and 30 percent of the population has been infected with the corona virus, and that about 40 percent of the population should be vaccinated to gain herd immunity.

“The minimum for vaccination is 1.4 million people, and the maximum is around 3.5 million. If we can do all of that, we will achieve herd immunity and after that we will continue to live normally,” Djerlek said.

(Kurir.rs/Beta)


delivery courier

Author: delivery courier



[ad_2]