Lake County
says smallpox vaccinations a waste of precious money
By Madhu Krishnamurthy
Daily Herald Staff Writer
05/24/03
Federal terror threat warnings may have placed the
country on a heightened level of alert, but bioterrorism
preparedness is taking a toll on area health
departments.
Health officials in Lake and other counties are
grumbling about the time, money and resources they were
required to put into preparing for smallpox
vaccinations, mandated by the federal government, only
to watch the program fizzle out.
Officials say they would have better used those
resources elsewhere, such as for fighting West Nile
virus and tuberculosis.
"This is a federal debacle that now could be written
as a local public health failure," Lake County health
department Executive Director Dale Galassie told board
of health members earlier this month.
Lake County held its second and final smallpox
vaccination clinic Thursday with poor turnout.
"We were expecting three people, but due to medical
reasons none were vaccinated," spokeswoman Leslie
Piotrowski said. "There won't be any more clinics."
The county health department vaccinated eight health
workers, four of its own staff and four from Advocate
Good Shepherd Hospital in Barrington. The logistics
alone of organizing clinics created a management
headache. The county spent about $25,000 on staffing and
equipment in the effort.
"It was a big pain to set up," said Bill Mays,
director of community health services. "Not every site
is suitable for an immunization clinic of that type, and
it took quite a bit of staff time and effort to identify
the sites."
Many counties have spent thousands of dollars in
planning for smallpox vaccinations with little to show
for it.
"The DuPage County Health Department has not given
one smallpox vaccination yet," said Leland Lewis,
executive director. DuPage spent several hundred
thousand dollars for its program with zero help from
state or federal agencies.
Counties were initially told to use funds from
bioterrorism grants already earmarked for other
purposes. But now it seems they might receive some
federal aid.
The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
announced earlier this month it would allocate $100
million to assist states with their smallpox vaccination
programs.
"Because a smallpox attack is possible, we must
prepare our public health workers to quickly respond to
protect the American public," Health and Human Services
Secretary Tommy Thompson said in a prepared statement.
However, there's been no word yet when that funding
will be available, state health department spokeswoman
Jena Welliever said.
"Once we receive that, we'll know what it can be used
for and how it can be allocated," she said.
Meanwhile, local health departments will have to make
do with what resources they have.
Some health officials are taking the matter in
stride.
"Whether we wind up vaccinating a lot of people or
not is kind of moot because we did really learn from the
experience," said Kitty Loewy, director of
communications for the Cook County public health
department. "It has given us some perspective."
Cook never really got its program up and running and
has a clinic scheduled for mid-June. Interest in
participation has not been what officials anticipated.
Officials expected to vaccinate about 1,200 health
workers in suburban Cook County.
"That was an optimistic figure," Loewy said. "We
don't have more than 10 people total interested in being
vaccinated. A lot of hospitals decided to not
participate right now."
That's because in March vaccinations were halted
nationwide due to heart problems caused by the vaccine
in a few volunteers elsewhere in the country, some
resulting in death. All clinics were held in limbo until
the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention issued
new guidelines for vaccinations. The directive states
people with heart problems cannot be vaccinated.
The biggest issue is screening people to see if they
are eligible to take the vaccine.
"The screening part of the clinic is especially
intense because of the volatility of the vaccine ...
because it's so prominently associated with adverse
effects," Mays said.
That not only affected the number of volunteers
willing to take the risk, but raised issues of
accountability.
"I wouldn't allow any smallpox vaccination to be
given by my staff until I knew that they were personally
protected from the liability standpoint," Lewis said. In
most counties, volunteers are protected under the
worker's compensation law.
DuPage has a smallpox clinic scheduled for Thursday.
Lewis said he's not second guessing the federal mandate
but wants to see some funding for the program in the
near future.
"When you have to pull staff to work on bioterrorism
you can't do the things that you're supposed to be
doing," Lewis said. "Something has to give. You have to
give up some of the basic public health services, and
that's our dilemma."
Though state officials are optimistic about receiving
a piece of the $100 million pie, local officials are
waiting for proof. Since all monies will be distributed
by the state, "we don't know what we would end up with,"
Mays said. "We haven't seen the money yet, and we don't
know how much we would be getting."