Claudia Müller's profile picture on Whatsapp shows a blonde woman in her late 40s with a big smile and the sun shining on her face.

Müller is a passionate teacher with a large group of friends, enjoys skiing and sounds happy and confident on the phone.

She agreed to an interview because she thinks that her opinion on the corona vaccinations is not enough in the media.

Although she teaches dozens of students every day, Claudia Müller does not want to be vaccinated against the virus.

"Vaccines that normally take ten years are approved for," says Claudia Müller.

"You don't know anything about long-term effects, side effects, long-term effects."

Leonie Feuerbach

Editor in Frankfurter Allgemeine Magazin.

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    Like Claudia Müller, a quarter of Germans over the age of 18 see it, who do not want to be vaccinated according to a recent survey. That doesn't sound like a lot. However, mathematical models assume that the pandemic does not end until immunity is around 80 percent, and it is still unclear how willingness to vaccinate among twelve to seventeen-year-olds. Younger people, pregnant women and some previously ill people cannot or should not be vaccinated. In order to achieve herd immunity, quite a few vaccine skeptics still have to change their minds. What are the chances that this will happen?