South-African Coronavirus Variant Appears in Hungary
Hungarian authorities will make some changes to the country’s vaccination plan to ensure that “as many people as possible” receive at least the first shot, and obtain “if not full but significant” protection against Covid-19, the chief medical officer said on Friday.
Cecília Müller told an online briefing held by the board coordinating efforts against the pandemic that “the first jab of almost all vaccines yields 50-75 percent protection”, which she said was sufficient to prevent serious Covid symptoms, complications, or death.
“Just get whichever vaccine is available. The virus can no longer win.” – We sat down to discuss the rollout of coronavirus vaccines in Hungary, vaccination in general, and the race against the virus’s evolution, with South Pest Hospital Centre’s chief infectologist, János Szlávik. Let us jump a couple of months forward in time. It’s […]Continue reading
Online education has proved a necessity for the time being, since many teachers in Hungary tested positive for the coronavirus last year. A joint survey by the 21 Research Center and the Trade Union of Teachers (PSZ) found that 19 percent of the 1269 teachers involved in the study had previously caught the virus.
The survey, liberal news portal 24.hu reports, found that among those teachers who caught the virus, a quarter (24 percent) were 18-29 years old, 19 percent were between 30-59 years old, and 15 percent were 60 years or older.
The vast majority of those afflicted caught the virus during the second wave, and only a fraction of respondents caught the virus during the first or both waves.