Smallpox vaccination plan's future
unclear
By Anita Manning, USA TODAY
ATLANTA — The future of the government's
smallpox-preparedness program may be decided not
by the White House or the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention but by the nurses, doctors
and others who are not lining up for voluntary
vaccinations.
Even before an expert panel
advised last week against expanding the vaccine program
beyond the first phase, the program had slowed to about
100 vaccinations a week. Nearly 38,000 medical and
public health workers have been immunized, far fewer
than the 450,000 initially expected in the program's
first phase. In the next phase, the vaccine is to be
offered to police, firefighters and emergency workers,
potentially 10 million people.
Thursday's recommendation not to
move forward was made by the Advisory Committee on
Immunization Practices, which provides advice on
vaccines to the CDC. The committee cited concerns about
"new and unanticipated safety concerns," specifically
nearly two dozen cases of myocarditis, a potentially
life-threatening inflammation of the heart muscle, and
pericarditis, a less dangerous inflammation of the heart
lining, that have occurred among recently vaccinated
people in the civilian part of the program. The military
has seen nearly 50 such cases among the more than
454,000 military personnel vaccinated since December.
Many medical experts have not
been convinced that the unknown risk of a smallpox
attack is balanced by the known risk of the vaccine
itself, which contains a live virus similar to smallpox
that can cause life-threatening side effects. Offering
it to medically trained people within a medical setting
seemed a manageable risk to many on the advisory
committee, but widening the program dramatically did
not.
"The committee has believed from
the beginning that we need to put safety above and
beyond all other concerns," said committee chairman John
Modlin, a professor at Dartmouth Medical School. A pause
in the smallpox program, he said, "will allow us to buy
some time and better understand both sides of the
equation, the safety and the threat."
CDC director Julie Gerberding
said in a briefing that there is no indication that the
risk of smallpox has changed since December, when
President Bush announced the policy in preparation for a
possible bioterrorist attack. "We have made a giant step
forward in our preparedness," she said, "but we are not
done yet."
The CDC will balance the
committee's advice "with the other priorities that are
necessary to make a sound public health decision,"
Gerberding said.
Florida already has moved into
the second phase of the program, and 124 emergency
workers have been vaccinated. No slowdown of the program
is planned, health department spokeswoman Lindsay Hodges
said. The state "is committed to this, as both an effort
to deter any attack or to react in the face of an
attack," she said.
But in Texas, a decision to wait
before moving into Phase 2 "will play well," health
department spokesman Doug McBride said. "There has been
concern expressed by state officials for several months
about the wisdom of going straight from Phase 1 into
Phase 2 without the time to look at safety
considerations, to assess, to gear up and plan it." |