CLOSE
Loading...
12° Nicosia,
24 March, 2026
 
Home  /  Comment  /  Opinion

Second Covid booster? Yeah… maybe

Covid-19 has shown us from the get-go that scientists can only learn about it as it evolves

Opinion

Opinion

by Elias Maglinis

In contrast to the speed with which we took up the previous doses of the vaccine against SARS-CoV-2, Greeks are hesitating over the fourth dose. Maybe because it’s summer and the open air makes us feel that we are better protected, many Greeks are putting off any decisions on the second booster until the fall so they can feel safer during the winter that lies ahead.

It would be better if we had more clarity from the scientific community about whether existing vaccines are, indeed, insufficient against these strains

Many doctors also appear to be encouraging their patients to wait until the fall, even though cases have been rising sharply in recent weeks and will most likely keep going up the longer we continue with the relaxed summer attitude.

It is not just that people have grown weary. It is also all the speculation and talk about the different subvariants that existing vaccines do not provide protection against. We’re hearing about BA.2 and BA.3, which usually cause mild symptoms and a couple of days with a moderately high fever, but we’re also hearing about BA.4 and BA.5, which are more severe.

It would be better if we had more clarity from the scientific community about whether existing vaccines are, indeed, insufficient against these strains. Of course, it is also likely that the experts themselves are not certain. Covid-19 has shown us from the get-go that scientists can only learn about it as it evolves.

But there is another reason why people are not eager to get the second booster. Overlooking the obvious fact that it is not mandatory, as previous doses were for specific jobs and sectors, the reason seems to lie in the fact that while transmission is high, fatalities are still low. There is a growing sense that the virus is becoming less dangerous, something we will have to live with, like the flu, and that there is no cause for real alarm except for people who have underlying health problems or vulnerabilities.

The virus is simply not as scary as it was. But, it has also shown us that it is unpredictable, so we should not be resting on our laurels. That said, we should also be able to look forward to some kind of official position, an expert recommendation, instead of doing whatever we suppose best.

TAGS
Cyprus  |  Greece  |  covid

Opinion: Latest Articles

An erratic presidency risks strengthening the very regimes America opposes. Image is AI

He's no FDR

A reckless Iran war reveals how far U.S. leadership has fallen.
Opinion
 |  OPINION
Seventy years after the Suez Crisis, the closure of the Strait of Hormuz is once again exposing the fragility of global energy security. Photo credit: Wikipedia

Two crises, seven decades apart

Two strategic chokepoints, seventy years apart each reveal how conflict in key maritime routes can shake the global economy. ...
Opinion
 |  OPINION
Iran’s decentralized ''mosaic defense'' may complicate the war in the Gulf, but its real danger lies in what comes after: a region fragmented by rival militias and warlords. File photo AI

The strategy of chaos

Tehran’s strategy is designed to survive bombing and central collapse, yet it risks unleashing uncontrollable forces that ...
Opinion
 |  OPINION
Marked by war and wildfires, Cyprus is still waiting for its life-saving warning system. Image is AI

If not now, when?

Three years after promises were made, the country remains without a mobile emergency alert system required under EU law.
Dorita Yiannakou
 |  OPINION
Beijing watches closely while Washington deepens its military and political commitments. Photo is AI

What might China be thinking?

China may be betting that another prolonged conflict will drain U.S. power and distract it from the strategic competition ...
Alexis Papachelas
 |  OPINION
A risky strategy aimed at regime change in Iran could reshape the Middle East. Photo credit: BBC

Trump’s proxy war moment

Washington is betting that airpower and internal dissent can topple Tehran, without sending U.S. troops into another Middle ...
Opinion
 |  OPINION
Officials praise their record but citizens see a widening gap between accountability and impunity.

Dangerous matters

The 'Golden Passports' verdict deepens public mistrust in Cyprus’s justice system.
Dorita Yiannakou
 |  OPINION
While historic homes fall to midnight demolitions, citizens and bicommunal initiatives struggle to defend the island’s shared heritage. Photo credit: @TCCHCyprus

The island is drowning in concrete

Unrestrained development is erasing Cyprus’s architectural memory, yet resistance is growing on both sides of the divide. ...
Apostolos Kouroupakis
 |  OPINION
X