Gerberding says effort to immunize health workers lagging
ASSOCIATED PRESS
WASHINGTON, July 24 The number of health care workers vaccinated against
smallpox varies widely across the country, a top federal health official said
Thursday, offering the most detailed picture yet of the foundering vaccination
program.
NATIONALLY, ONLY about 38,000 people have been vaccinated against the virus,
which has been wiped from earth but could return in an act of bioterrorism.
Federal official believe the nation needs a substantial core of vaccinated
workers prepared to treat patients should an outbreak occur. But while some
states have many hospitals with a substantial core of vaccinated workers, about
a dozen have none.
Some states and jurisdictions are doing quite well, Dr. Julie Gerberding,
director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, told a Senate
committee Thursday. Others are lagging behind.
Its far short of the initial target of vaccinating some 450,000 people
nationally in a first stage of shots, including people on public health response
teams and hospital workers. Smallpox vaccinations, which carry rare but serious
risks, have come to a virtual standstill amid doubts about the seriousness of
the threat and resistance among health workers.
Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass., expressed deep concern about the flagging
program and about the nations overall preparation against the bioterrorism
threat.
PROGRAM IN SHAMBLES
In one area where this administration has tried to take action smallpox
vaccination the result has been a shambles, Kennedy said. Instead of a
coordinated plan ... the administration rushed forward with a poorly planned
program of vaccination. The result is that the vaccination program is off course
and behind schedule.
Kennedy also expressed dismay that, while Congress approved compensation for
people injured by the vaccine nearly three months ago, the Bush administration
has not published the table of injuries needed to implement the program. This
table indicates how much money someone will receive for various types of
injuries.
We are increasingly concerned about the delay, Sens. Kennedy and Chris
Dodd, D-Conn., wrote Thursday in a letter to Health and Human Services Secretary
Tommy Thompson. Too many first responders aware of the possibility of side
effects are refusing to participate in this very high priority vaccination
program.
Gerberding said the table was nearly complete and she expected it to be
released soon.
OTHER PREPARATIONS UNDER WAY
She also said that while vaccinations are lagging behind expectations,
federal and state authorities have done other work to prepare for the
possibility of a smallpox attack. That includes ordering and receiving more
vaccine doses, developing plans to distribute the vaccine in mass clinics should
an attack occur and training doctors and others about the disease and how to
spot and treat it.
Gerberding showed the Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee a U.S.
map showing that vaccination clinics have operated in cities across the country.
Many of these clinics have vaccinated only a handful of people, but they would
be prepared to vaccinate others in the case of an attack, she said.
A second U.S. map showed just how spotty the coverage is now. Dots were
placed on cities with at least one hospital that had vaccinated at least 25
workers. Close to a dozen states had no dots at all, including a swath of the
country stretching from Montana to Idaho to Nevada to Arizona to New Mexico to
Colorado. There were also no dots in Maine, Georgia, Oklahoma, Alaska or Hawaii.
A full list of all states without dots was not immediately available;
borderlines on the map showed to the Senate committee were blurry in some cases,
making it unclear which state claims the dot.
The CDC map gave bigger dots to cities with hospitals that had 50 or more
vaccinated workers. And the largest dots were placed on cities with multiple
hospitals with substantial vaccination.
Only about a dozen states had cities with the largest dots, although some of
them, including Florida, Texas and Tennessee, had several cities with the
largest dots.
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reflecting the knowledge or opinions of the publisher, and is not to be
construed or intended as providing medical or legal advice. The decision
whether or not to vaccinate is an important and complex issue and should
be made by you, and you alone, in consultation with your health care
provider.
"A foolish faith in authority is the worst enemy of truth."
-- Albert Einstein, letter to a friend, 1901
"I know of no safe depository of the ultimate powers of the society but the people themselves, and if we think them not enlightened enough to exercise control with a wholesome discretion, the remedy is not to take it from them, but to inform their discretion by education."
-- Thomas Jefferson, letter to William C. Jarvis, September 28, 1820
"What's the point of vaccination if it doesn't protect you from the unvaccinated?"
-- Sandy Gottstein
"Who gets to decide what the greater good is and how many will be sacrificed to it?"