Smallpox Compensation Fund Proposed
Mar 6, 2003 2:30 pm
US/Eastern
(AP)
(WASHINGTON)
After months of delay, the Bush administration is
proposing a compensation fund for people injured
by the smallpox vaccine, trying to plug the most
prominent hole in its inoculation program.
The proposal, which Congress would have to
approve, is based on a similar compensation
package now available to police officers and
firefighters injured on the job.
Under the plan, the government would pay $262,100
for each person who dies or is permanently and
totally disabled by the vaccine. Those less
severely injured could receive up to $50,000 plus
medical expenses.
The vaccine, effective in preventing the
transmission of the highly contagious disease,
carries rare but serious risks, including death.
Smallpox was declared eradicated globally in 1980,
but there is fear it could return in an act of
bioterrorism.
The plan announced Wednesday by the Health and
Human Services Department would compensate people
who are being asked to participate in the
vaccination program -- as many as 10.5 million
health care workers and emergency responders. The
fund also would cover people injured because they
came into contact with a vaccinated worker.
"We are asking these health professionals to
perform a vital public duty, so we are proposing
to provide them the same sort of benefits that we
provide our public safety officers when they are
injured on the job," Dr. Julie Gerberding,
director of the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention, said in a statement.
The government is making the vaccine available to
the general public but not recommending it, and
these people would not be eligible for
compensation from the fund.
An existing federal compensation fund covers those
injured by other vaccines, but not smallpox.
People injured by the smallpox vaccine are not
likely to be fully compensated for lost wages or
medical expenses without a separate fund.
That partly explains the tepid early response to
the federal vaccination program, according to
state and local officials, unions, hospitals and
health care workers.
Federal officials initially aimed to vaccinate as
many as 450,000 people on special smallpox
response teams in about a month. As of Tuesday,
about six weeks into the program, 12,404 people
had been vaccinated.
Officials are hoping the fund will increase the
numbers. "We would expect that this would provide
a level of comfort to those who are concerned
about the vaccine," said Jerry Hauer, the top
bioterrorism official at HHS.
The government said its compensation plan, modeled
after the Public Safety Officers Benefit program,
would:
Offer $262,100 for people who die or are
permanently and totally disabled because of the
vaccine. The money would be paid even if the
victim had other death benefits.
Pay up to $50,000 in lost wages for people
temporarily or partially disabled by the vaccine.
The government would pay two-thirds of lost wages
after the fifth day away from work, with a maximum
of $50,000. This would be in addition to any
workers' compensation or disability insurance
benefits available.
Pay reasonable out-of-pocket medical expenses,
other than minor injuries, for people injured.
This would be secondary to any health insurance
benefit available.
Retroactively cover everyone who has been
vaccinated since Jan. 24, when the civilian
program began.
The smallpox vaccine is made with a live virus
called vaccinia, which is related to smallpox and
can infect the body. Experts estimate that as many
as 50 people out of every 1 million vaccinated for
the first time will face life-threatening
complications, and one or two will die. Reactions
are less common in people being revaccinated.
Officials in Florida, Minnesota and Virginia have
said they are investigating a handful of cases of
people sickened after getting the vaccine, and
there have been several reactions among military
personnel being vaccinated. None of the reported
reactions have been serious.
The most common serious reaction comes when
vaccinia escapes from the inoculation site, often
because people touch the site and then touch
themselves or someone else. The virus transferred
to the eye, for instance, can cause blindness.
More deadly is encephalitis, which can cause
paralysis or permanent neurological damage. Also
fatal though very rare is progressive vaccinia,
where the vaccination site does not heal and the
virus spreads, eating away at flesh, bone and gut.
(© 2003 The Associated
Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not
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