
By ANDRé PICARD
PUBLIC HEALTH REPORTER
Tuesday, December 3, 2002
– Page A8
VICTORIA -- Physicians who fail
to counsel parents to have their children vaccinated are leaving
themselves open to legal action, the group that insures most
Canadian doctors is warning.
In its December newsletter, the Canadian Medical Protective
Association tells physicians the standard of care in Canada is to
vaccinate against a dozen childhood illnesses.
That means doctors have an obligation to talk to parents about
the benefits and risks of these vaccines, including three costly new
vaccines that are not offered free of charge in most of the country.
"This is creating a real ethical dilemma for pediatricians who
want to do what's best for the kids, but know that many parents
cannot afford the vaccines," said Marie-Adèle Davis, executive
director of the Canadian Pediatric Society.
She said the fact that some provinces offer vaccines against
chickenpox, meningococcal disease and pneumococcal disease, while
others do not undermines the principles of medicare, and
discriminates against poorer children.
The CPS wants governments to make all childhood immunizations
free of charge from coast to coast.
"There should be no economic barriers to health care for
children," Ms. Davis said.
The growing inequities in the availability of vaccines in Canada
is dominating discussion at the Canadian National Immunization
Conference in Victoria, and fuelling calls for a national strategy.
Across the country, children are vaccinated against nine common
infectious agents: diphtheria, tetanus, pertussis, measles, mumps,
rubella, polio, Haemophilus influenza b (Hib), and hepatitis B.
All those vaccines are free of charge, and with almost universal
coverage, these once-deadly diseases have virtually disappeared from
Canada. While it is not yet on the schedules, most provinces will
also cover the cost of vaccinating children against influenza.
However, most provinces and territories have been slow to embrace
new vaccines.
These include a vaccine for varicella (commonly known as
chickenpox), one that protects against seven strains of pneumococcal
bacteria (which are the leading cause of earaches, meningitis and
childhood pneumonia) and another that protects against meningococcal
group C bacteria (which can cause deadly meningitis). There is also
a growing debate about adding a booster shot against pertussis
(whooping cough) in adolescence.
Monika Naus, associate director of epidemiology at the B.C.
Centre for Disease Control in Vancouver, presented a series of maps
that highlighted the inequities between provinces and territories.
According to her findings:
The chickenpox vaccine, called Varivax, is offered free of charge
to children in Prince Edward Island, Alberta, Nunavut and the
Northwest Territories. In other provinces and territories, it can be
purchased, but parents must pay $75 or more.
The meningococcal vaccine, called Menjugate, is part of the basic
immunization schedule in Quebec and Alberta. In other provinces,
parents can purchase it, but the cost can be as high as $200.
The pneumococcal vaccine, called Prevnar, is free of charge for
children in Alberta and Nunavut. Elsewhere in the country, it can
cost up to $150.
The adolescent pertussis vaccine, called Adacel, is paid for by
governments in Newfoundland, Nunavut and the Northwest Territories.
Other provinces are hesitating, even though it costs only about $10.
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