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| Date | December 23, 2020 (2020-12-23) – present |
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| Location | Switzerland |
| Cause | COVID-19 pandemic in Switzerland |
| Part ofa series on the |
| COVID-19 pandemic |
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Medical response |
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COVID-19 vaccination in Switzerland is an ongoingimmunization campaign againstsevere acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), the virus that causescoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), in response to theongoing pandemic in the country.
By 14 November 2023, 17,015,053 doses of COVID-19 vaccine have been administered.[1]
On 19 December 2020, the Swiss Agency for Therapeutic Products (Swissmedic) approved thePfizer–BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine (Comirnaty) for regular use, two months after receiving the application, although it was expected to give a decision later than other European countries, as Swiss laws do not allow emergency approvals. After the application was processed with high priority using all the available resources, the head of Swissmedic stated that the vaccine fully complied with the requirements of safety, efficacy, and quality. This constituted the first authorization by astringent regulatory authority under a standard procedure for anyCOVID-19 vaccine.[2][3] Three days later, 107 000 vaccine shots were received by the army to be dispatched in the cantons. On 23 December, 302 days after the first official case, the first patient, a 90-year-old woman from Central Switzerland, was vaccinated in a retirement home inLucerne.[4] On that day, the cantons ofLucerne,Zug,Schwyz,Nidwalden andAppenzell Innerrhoden launched the vaccination campaign,[5] marking the beginning of mass vaccination in Switzerland and continental Europe outside Russia.[6] Most cantons followed by 4 January 2021 and all the rest of them by 11 January. By that day, about 0.5% of the population received the Pfizer–BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine.[7]
On 12 January 2021, Swissmedic approved the second COVID-19 vaccine: themRNA-1273 made byModerna.[8][9] TheLonza Group where the vaccine is produced was visited by Federal CouncilorAlain Berset the previous day. Up to 800,000 vaccines per day are expected to be produced there. A year after the first COVID-19 outbreak, the number of vaccinated people largely outnumbered the official cases. On 7 March, about 10% of the population received at least one shot of the two approved vaccines (Pfizer and Moderna) and about 3% were fully vaccinated.[10]
A third vaccine, the Oxford/AstraZeneca vaccine (AZD1222), which comprised 5.3 million of the doses ordered by Swiss authorities, was rejected for approval by the Swiss medical authority, SwissMedic, citing insufficient data.[11]
In March 2021, theSwiss Federal Health Ministry reported that approved vaccine deliveries have increased steadily every month. Switzerland received 1.1 million doses of the Moderna and Pfizer vaccines in January and February 2021, and another 1 million vaccine doses in March, exceeding initial expectations. As of 14 November, there have been 6,123,678 people who have taken the first dose of coronavirus vaccine.[12][13] The country plans to have its 8.6 million residents vaccinated by summer 2021.[14]
In April 2021, there were reports that vaccine administration and production efforts at theLonza Group plant inVisp have been hampered due to overly stringent immigration rules in Switzerland, reducing the influx of qualified biotech and healthcare workers, particularly with regard to non-EU/EFTA states. TheValais National Council urged the Swiss federal authorities to create exemptions from the current immigration rules for essential biotech industries.[15]

| Vaccine | Approval | Deployment |
|---|---|---|
| Pfizer–BioNTech | ||
| Moderna | ||
| Janssen | ||
| Novavax |
Le média zurichois affirme même qu'il s'agit-là de la première personne vaccinée en Europe. Indépendamment de cette vaine «course», cette injection marque, pour la Suisse et l'ensemble du continent, un tournant peut-être décisif dans la lutte contre une pandémie...[The Zurich media even claims that this is the first person vaccinated in Europe. Regardless of this vain "race", this injection marks, for Switzerland and the whole of the continent, a perhaps decisive turning point in the fight against a pandemic...]