300 Italian health workers challenge vaccine obligation

By AFP
04 July 2021
300 Italian health workers challenge vaccine obligation
Air Force doctors check the list of the people registered to recive a dose of anti-Covid-19 vaccine at the new vaccination center set up at the Command of the 1st Air Region of the Italian Air Force in Milan, Italy, 21 April 2021. Photo: EPA

Three hundred healthcare workers in Italy have lodged a legal challenge against the requirement that they get vaccinated against coronavirus, according to media reports Saturday.

The case, brought by professionals throughout northern Italy, will be heard on July 14.

"This isn't a battle by anti-vaxxers but a democratic battle," constitutional lawyer Daniele Granara, who helped build up the case, was cited as saying in the Giornale di Brescia newspaper.

"We force people to take a risk under threat of no longer being allowed to exercise their profession," he added.

Granara is also defending dozens of caregivers who have been suspended from work for refusing to be vaccinated.

Italy passed a law in April obliging anyone working in public or private social health positions, including in pharmacies and doctors' offices, to get vaccinated against Covid-19 or be suspended without pay, unless their employer can reassign them to a less sensitive position.

After the elderly and vulnerable, caregivers including teachers were the first to be vaccinated in Italy.

A total of 52.7 million vaccine does have been administered throughout the country, and around 19.5 million Italians are now fully vaccinated, 36 percent of the population over 12 years of age.

According to recent official figures, 45,750 of the 1.9 million salaried healthcare workers have not yet received a single vaccine dose.

Growing numbers of health professionals are challenging mandatory vaccination, typically on the grounds that the vaccine should be voluntary, that the vaccines are in an experimental phase, and that they are potentially dangerous – adverse reactions mounting as the programme is rolled out.

AFP