site.btaEU Commissioner Stella Kyriakides on Official Visit to Bulgaria, Talks EU COVID Certificate
Sofia, June 17 (BTA) - The success of the vaccination campaign 
against COVID-19 depends on the ability to choose between 
vaccines, as well as people's belief in the vaccines' short- and
 long-term safety, said President Rumen Radev here on Thursday 
during his meeting with visiting European Commissioner for 
Health and Food Safety Stella Kyriakides, Radev's Press 
Secretariat said. 
Commissioner Kyriakides noted that broadening national 
vaccination campaigns will help the immunization process cover 
more EU citizens. All Europeans need to have equal access to 
vaccines, she added. 
According to Radev, the reason for the low share of vaccinated 
Bulgarians is because vaccines from all manufacturers were not 
supplied at the start of the vaccination campaign. 
The head of State described the high mortality rate in Bulgaria 
in light of the decreasing number of new COVID-19 infections as 
a problem for this country. 
According to President Radev, it is very important to provide 
people with access to proper health care in the so-called 
"golden hour" after an accident. "Thousands of Bulgarians are 
losing their lives because they cannot be helped in the first 
hour after suffering an accident, and especially after a stroke 
or a heart attack," Radev noted, adding that this problem is 
even more serious in remote settlements. That's why the 
caretaker Government is working on including a project for the 
establishment of a Helicopter Emergency Medical Service (HEMS) 
in the Recovery and Resilience Plan, which Bulgaria will present
 to the European Commission. 
President Radev has called for relaxing the administrative 
procedures when a country donates vaccines to another. He said 
that Bulgaria would like to donate vaccines to the Republic of 
North Macedonia. 
COVID-19 certificates 
Kyriakides said earlier in the day that  scientists are 
currently studying the effectiveness of rapid antigen COVID 
tests. She noted that when, and if, there is sufficient 
scientific data, the results from such tests will be recognized 
by the EU Digital COVID Certificate. 
She stressed that the safest way to travel freely is to get 
vaccinated. 'We follow science, the advice of scientists, so 
that we can provide reliable information,'' she added. The EU 
COVID certificates currently cover those who have been 
vaccinated against COVID-19, as well as those who have had a PCR
 test or have been infected and recovered, but the latter is 
only recognized if proven by a PCR test.
Nearly 50 per cent of Europeans have already been vaccinated, 
Kyriakides said. 
Meeting with caretaker Health Minister Katsarov
Earlier in the day, the EU Commissioner met with caretaker 
Health Minister Stoycho Katsarov and the two visited a mobile 
COVID-19 immunization centre on Alexander Battenberg Square in 
Sofia.
Minister Katsarov told reporters that he and EU Commissioner 
Kyriakides had discussed the development of a national 
anti-cancer plan. Further co-operation with the EC on 
prevention, treatment, rehabilitation and palliative care for 
people with cancer was also discussed, he said.
Later in the day, the press service of the Ministry of Health 
said that during the conversation the two discussed the epidemic
 situation and the immunization coverage in the European Union, 
as well as the problems faced by EU Member States in 
implementing their vaccination campaigns.
Katsarov pointed out that one of the first tasks he and his team
 set for themselves upon taking office was to vaccinate people 
over the age of 60 as a priority. "The registered high mortality
 rate comes from the fact that people over the age of 60 were 
not a priority group in the National Vaccination Plan," Katsarov
 said.
As the main reasons for the low vaccination coverage in the 
country, Katsarov pointed out the reluctance of a large part of 
the Bulgarian population to get vaccinated, as well as the sense
 of security coming from the decreasing number of COVID-19 
infections. Katsarov added that the Ministry of Health is 
currently launching an information campaign on the benefits of 
vaccines, but that it is coming too late. "This is something 
that had to be done at the beginning of the year to have an 
effect now," he said.
RI,RY/DT, MY
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