Hear the covid surgeon develop his critique in the clip.

Ulrik Lindforss says that he was vaccinated early with Astra Zeneca's vaccine, the protective effect of which turned out to be questionable after four to five months.

Especially fast in the group he himself belongs to, men over 60 years.

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I woke up with a fever, severe joint pain and now the sense of smell has disappeared.

I hardly thought it was possible to get so bad when you received two doses of vaccine and hardly dare to think about how I felt without that basic protection, says the chief physician and continues:

It is not without bitterness that I note that we have discussed the need for a third refill dose for six weeks without anything concrete happening.

It feels like healthcare should be a priority group, as important as the Armed Forces or the staff at nuclear power plants.

Ulrik Lindforss does not want to point out anyone specific in the issue of responsibility, but believes that it is bureaucracy and inertia in the system that has made care employees not prioritized before.

And he is far from alone in his criticism.

The care association agrees

The Swedish Healthcare Association also expresses dissatisfaction that it took so long before the members were offered a third dose of vaccine.

It is believed that the regions' planning has been poor and that the vaccination work is too slow.

The number of intensive care nurses is very limited, and should some of them become ill, the situation can become very strained.

The responsibility for delaying the measure is being shared between the authorities.

The Swedish Public Health Agency claims that it is the regions that are responsible for the vaccinations being carried out.

While the regions in turn claim that they could not start planning until FHM put care staff on the priority list.

This did not happen until November 24, when FHM announced that care and nursing staff who risk passing the infection on to people in the risk group

can be

given priority (editorial italics).

"This provided that the region assesses that this can be done without the risk of displacement effects for other groups."