Prime Minister Scott Morrison’s unscripted slip of the tongue at a press conference last week led to days of chaos between state premiers, chief health officers and medical bodies about who exactly could and should get the AstraZeneca vaccine.
“The advice does not preclude persons under 60 from getting the AstraZeneca vaccine. And so if you wish to get the AstraZeneca vaccine, then we would encourage you to ah, go and have that discussion with your GP,” Morrison said.
But those words also offered a glimmer of hope to young Australians. For months we’ve been desperate to get vaccinated. For months we’ve assumed our own vaccinations would have to wait as a sluggish rollout struggled to reach those most at risk. And for months we’ve watched some of those eligible for AstraZeneca dither, happy to wait it out until their choice of vaccine becomes available.
That gnawing frustration, deepened by Sydney’s return to lockdown, meant that once Morrison opened the floodgates the choice become easy for me. Suddenly a vaccination felt within reach. When a fellow press gallery journalist tweeted about getting an AstraZeneca vaccine booked in Canberra that day, I quickly messaged her. Within minutes I was locked in for the next afternoon.
After months spent waiting, documenting the slow train wreck of the vaccine rollout, the whole experience was oddly straightforward. That experience isn’t universal. Later that afternoon, the clinic I was at, heaving with under 40s, ran out of doses. There’s also little consistency — numerous other GPs are turning away under 40s, pointing to advice from ATAGI that due to the rare risk of blood clots, Pfizer is the preferred vaccine for them.
But my experience also points to another theme among young people. Most are using informal channels — DMs, group chats and the like — to secure their bookings. In Sydney, several friends told me they booked Pfizer shots by using links meant for families of health workers which are doing the rounds. The links normally ask you to fill out a form and requests your birth date. But you can still secure the booking even if you’re not technically old enough. It’s a loophole many are exploiting.
Edward,* who was unclear about his eligibility after discussions with his doctor despite being immunocompromised, had no qualms about using a link sent by a friend whose sister is a nurse. Sarah* got passed on a link to be part of a Pfizer trial for testing antibodies. People in their 20s are getting vaccinated at Randwick, Westmead, Liverpool and other centres across Sydney. All you really need is to know someone who knows a health worker. The group chats are blowing up with “secret” links.
But others told me they felt guilty about “jumping the queue”, especially when there are still people working in high-risk settings like aged care unvaccinated. In a rollout, where the country must strike the balance between getting as many shots as possible while prioritising those at greatest risk, the moral question of whether young people should jump the queue is a complex one, says University of Sydney bioethicist Diego Silva.
He says three weeks ago when there was widespread “vaccine malaise” — particularly among some older Australians, and a federal government adamant the rollout wasn’t a race — it made sense for younger people to bypass the system when they could. But outbreaks and lockdowns across Australia’s biggest cities have changed the calculus — suddenly everyone wants a vaccine, changing the ethics of how we should allocate dwindling Pfizer stocks.
Still Silva says responsibility for the disorderliness of the vaccine queue lies with the federal government. That people are going underground is a reflection of the truly broken state of the rollout — from chronic supply shortages to garbled, shifting messaging. Amid all that, younger Australians watching the world open up just want a return to normal.
“I think it points to the frustration that certainly millennial and gen Z Australians feel — and their frustration is very real. They’re seeing older generations of Australians taking their time,” he said. “When you’re in your 20s and 30s you want to get off the island and see the world.”
But Fortress Australia will be baked in for months. Under 40s are not likely to be able to access Pfizer or Moderna vaccines through less underground means until September or October. The frustration among young Australians isn’t going away.
Yesterday NSW Health Minister Brad Hazzard likened the vaccine rollout to The Hunger Games. He’s got a point. Many younger Australians are happy to do slightly morally dubious and risky things to get a needle in their arms. In the end, it might all be for the greater good.
*Name withheld
Go for it young ‘uns. Scotty’s already shown us that it’s a dog-eat-dog world out there. He won’t be looking out for you, better take care of yourselves.
every jab is another step towards herd immunity – go for it kids!
….”vaccine malaise… particularly among older Australians…” Really?
Please explain then why so many Nurses in major hospitals across NSW and other states remain unvaccinated when they were supposedly to be the first to get vaccinated, according to State & federal governments?
Or are they ALL “older Australians” working in hospitals, Aged Care and Community health settings?
I’m increasingly frustrated and angry at this pointing of fingers at older Australians ( Yes, I’m “older”) as being the sole cause of Aussies not being able to travel overseas.
It’s similar to Kerry Chant in NSW, a few days ago praising people, she’d “seen when I was out getting my groceries”, lined up at coffee shops, “wearing masks and social distancing” – in the middle of a lockdown – when she and Berejiklian had told everyone to only go out for “essential reasons only and shop online for groceries”.
Not one journalist picked her up on the comment, though my 11yo Grandson, watching it on TV, phoned to ask if I’d heard/seen it.
Chant, a day or two before, was seen standing behind Hazzard, mask less, until being called off-camera by Berejiklian, who obviously told her to wear the mask dangling from her hand – as she then returned to stand behind Hazzard, and put the mask on her face.
Again, not one journalist picked it up.
Here’s a suggestion…run a Poll on how many “health professionals” have had the AZ Vaccination – and, if they haven’t, ask why?
I, for one would be interested in hearing their excuses about why they haven’t had it…. especially given that they work in such vulnerable settings.
As to myself, one of those dreadful, “older Australians” who hasn’t had AZ …as I’ve previously said, I’ve been warned by my GP to wait for the Pfizer, due to health concerns….but it’s anyone’s guess when it will be available in the small community I live in.
I wonder whether the AMA could survey its members and tabulate the vax-status, Y/N or Other.
Ironically, the under 30s may well be the prime market for Astra Zeneca. I think about my risk-assessing abilities in my late teens early 20s, and I wonder how I got to be 57.
Having a nap in the middle of a road at night. Driving at 200 klicks. Jumping from a second storey balcony because it was quicker than going down the stairs. The list goes on and on. Gaaah. What was I thinking?
I reckon, regardless of the statistically-predictable number of blood clot deaths that will occur, it won’t deter the youngies like it did the oldies.
So who’d a thunk if you’d offered the AZ to the younger group with the higher fatality rate, and the mRNA vax to the older , you’d probably have had a much quicker roll out?
Just explain whether all these unofficial vaccinations achieved by getting around the system and even providing no birth date end up on the MyGov/Medicare Vaccination record – and if they don’t, how does that affect the count of vaccinations needed to calculate the percentage of the population covered when a level is set to trigger opening up the borders etc.
How does it help these ‘unofficial” vaccine recipients who’ll want a “vaccine passport” generated by the official record when its time to produce one to travel abroad or enter another country.
You need your Medicare card at vaccination time.
You can’t fake it. That is what will be registered.
All you’ve done is use a fake referral to get an appointment. The actual vaccination is recorded against the correct recipient.
Older hesitancy my Arse! I am 67 and awaiting my second az. So is my wife. Useless leaders, stupid campaign hopeless logistics.
Yeah, but look at Crikey’s Your Say a few weeks ago with a decent swathe of older people insisting that they should be entitled to the supposedly better quality Pfizer, and intending to wait until they could get it. There is a decent amount of older hesitancy, or malaise as Kishor put it, and he is seeing it here where he works. It certainly doesn’t apply across the board, but given what we have seen happen in other countries with outbreaks of this virus, it is much higher than I would have expected. I am 58 next week, I don’t have a GP and am in a regional area on the border. I worked out where there was a hub in Wodonga the day before Victoria went into lockdown, and once Victoria’s regional areas came out of lockdown, it appears the hub is no longer there. I intend to get whichever vaccine is available to me, but am not sure how to (my fault for not having a doctor – and when I followed prompts on the NSW Services App I was rejected because my email address was “not recognised”)
You forgot “terrible messaging” in the last part of your comment – so much of the messaging has undermined confidence and really has been problematic.
I think you need to do a bit of research. I’m 76 & in good health & Not interested in an experimental jab. Lies are being told & jab results are being covered up. What else did you expect ? https://theempoweror.com/ Check out these real life experiences that people have been exposed to. It’s not as safe as they would like you to believe.
James, sure there’s a lot of BS, but I do not think that lies are deliberately being told about vaccine efficacy.
If anything, the opposite, governments have fallen over themselves to reduce access to a vaccine with a 0.0008% chance of a blood clot.
If hundreds of million of people all took aspirin, it would probably have a much higher medical consequence.