The vaccination of foreign residents to start in mid-May

Fully 128 patients, generally elderly with co-morbidities, died over the past 24 hours, while 1,130 new infections were registered, koronavirus.gov.hu said on Wednesday. Furthermore, foreigners living in Hungary, Hungarians living abroad and ethnic Hungarians from other countries can also register for vaccination against Covid-19, starting on Tuesday, the government’s information centre said yesterday.
 
So far 4,123,697 people have received a first jab, while 2,248,775 have been fully vaccinated. The number of active infections has declined to 218,829, while hospitals are treating 4,374 Covid patients, 511 of whom need respiratory assistance.

There are 24,796 people in official quarantine, while 5,454,661 tests have been officially carried out. Since the first outbreak,
785,967 infections have been registered, while fatalities have risen to 28,173. Fully 538,965 people have made a recovery.
So far, most infections have been registered in Budapest and Pest County, followed by the counties of Borsod-Abaúj-Zemplén, Győr-Moson-Sopron and Hajdú-Bihar.
Coronavirus map Hungary
https://koronavirus.gov.hu/terkepek/fertozottek

Read also: 

Registration opens for foreign residents

People in those groups can register at www.vakcinainfo.gov.hu, the centre said.

It added that vaccination would start in the second half of May with foreign residents in Hungary, with Hungarian nationals living in other countries to follow.

As we wrote yesterday, the European Commission recommended allowing people fully inoculated with EU-recognised vaccines to be able to enter from any country, and said other vaccines could be added if they are approved by the World Health Organization (WHO).

The European Medicines Agency has authorised the use of shots by Pfizer, Moderna, Johnson & Johnson and AstraZeneca in the EU.

The WHO has also approved those vaccines for use and is expected to decide on the use of two Chinese vaccines this week. Both agencies are considering Russia’s Sputnik V vaccine.

Source: