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Dracula's castle lures visitors with Covid vaccinations

Medics administering the vaccine will wear scrubs with fang stickers on

Rory Sullivan
Monday 10 May 2021 07:05 EDT
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Medical workers are pictured at a vaccine centre at Bran Castle, Romania, on 8 May, 2021.
Medical workers are pictured at a vaccine centre at Bran Castle, Romania, on 8 May, 2021. (via REUTERS)

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A castle in Romania which houses a Dracula museum has been converted into a coronavirus vaccination centre to draw more visitors.

Bran Castle, which is thought to have inspired Bram Stoker’s novel Dracula, dates from the 14th century and is located in the Carpathian mountains.

Medics, who wear scrubs with fang stickers on, are offering people Pfizer vaccine shots every weekend in May. Each jab comes with free entry to the site’s museum on medieval torture.

The former royal palace turned to the service after tourist numbers dropped significantly during the pandemic.

Speaking about the scheme, Alexandru Priscu, the castle’s head of marketing, said: “The idea... was to show how people got jabbed 500-600 years ago in Europe.”

Fernando Orozco, 37, a renewable energy market developer, took the opportunity to be immunised. “I was already planning to come to the castle and I just thought it was the two-for-one special,” he told Reuters.

Romania has recorded more than a million Covid-19 cases and almost 29,000 deaths from the virus, according to data collected by Johns Hopkins University (JHU).

The country has so far fully vaccinated 2,254,449 people, equivalent to 11.65 per cent of its population. This is much lower than the UK’s 25.76 per cent but is higher than some other European countries, including the Netherlands, whose total stands at 5.44 per cent of its populace.

The Romanian government had initially hoped to give five million people both doses by 1 June and another five million their jabs by September. However, health minister Iona Mihaila said over the weekend that the first target would be missed.

Globsec, a Bratislava-based think tank, released a study last April saying that Romanians were more hesitant to have a vaccine than their EU neighbours.

Covid-19 infections in the capital Bratislava have declined in recent weeks, meaning that restaurants and cafes have reopened to 30 per cent capacity, after their indoor spaces were shut in late March because of rising case numbers.

Additional reporting by agencies

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