States Prepare Smallpox Vaccine
Plans
By LAURA MECKLER
Associated Press Writer
Originally published December 10, 2002, 1:59 AM EST
WASHINGTON -- Every state in the nation is preparing to offer the smallpox
vaccine to front-line medical workers, ready to begin a massive education
and vaccination program once President Bush gives the word.
But an Associated Press survey of states suggests wide variations in how
many people they plan to vaccinate and how many hospitals they expect will
participate in this first round of inoculations.
States were supposed to submit their plans for the first stage of smallpox
vaccinations by Monday to the federal government. Immunizations will begin
after a presidential announcement, expected in coming days, and states
have been told that they'll have 30 days to deliver the shots.
The first group to be offered the risky but effective vaccine will include
those most likely to encounter a highly contagious smallpox patient:
people on special smallpox response teams, who would investigate
suspicious cases, and workers in hospital emergency rooms.
Nationwide, federal officials have said that about a half million people
were expected in this first group, but officials said Monday they now
expect the numbers to be slightly lower. They now estimate that up to a
half million will be offered the shots, but that some of them will decline
to be vaccinated and others will be screened out because of conditions
that make them susceptible to dangerous side effects.
No matter what the final number, the AP survey suggests that these shots
are not likely to be evenly distributed across the country.
Georgia is planning shots for just 300 to 500 people, while neighboring
Louisiana anticipates as many as 20,000. California has requested 70,000
doses of the vaccine, where Michigan is asking for just 5,000 to 7,000.
In Michigan, the state plans to offer the vaccine at only about 30
hospitals. "We don't necessarily need it in every corner or at every
hospital," said Geralyn Lasher of the Michigan Department of Community
Health.
Twice as many hospitals are expected to participate in Montana, and North
Dakota hopes to have at least one team of 15 vaccinated health care
workers at each of the state's 46 hospitals.
In North Dakota, the state's vastness and lightly populated rural areas
make it important that all hospitals are capable of helping a smallpox
victim, said Tim Wiedrich, bioterrorism coordinator for the North Dakota
Health Department.
"We really believe that it's likely that smallpox patients could present
themselves at any of our hospitals," he said.
Federal officials plan to review the number and types of people included
in each state's plan and make sure they are comprehensive, said Jerry
Hauer, the top bioterrorism official at the Department of Health and Human
Services. He said he's not surprised by the variation.
"We wanted to give them that flexibility," he said.
The variation partly stems from the fact that states are each making their
own guesses about the chances of smallpox reappearing more than 20 years
after it was declared eradicated, said Dr. Rex Archer, director of the
Kansas City, Mo., health department. No one knows if smallpox will ever
return, but experts suspect that hostile nations and possibly terrorist
groups have the virus and could unleash it in an act of bioterrorism.
Others say that the variation among the states is likely to even out after
vaccinations begin, with some states asking for more vaccine and others
winding up with more than they need.
Plans being submitted to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
address a wide range of details about the first phase of smallpox
vaccinations.
States were asked to explain who would be offered the shots, timelines and
locations for delivering them and a plan for ensuring those at particular
risk of severe side effects do not get vaccinated.
Once the vaccinations begin, states will be required to keep detailed
track of how many people suffer reactions, with reports due twice a week
to the CDC.
They are climbing a logistical and medical mountain not ventured in three
decades, when routine smallpox vaccinations ended in the United States as
the disease waned.
It represents "one of the most complicated logistic activities any state
and local agency will have to undergo," said Michael Osterholm, a
bioterrorism expert at the University of Minnesota who is advising federal
officials on smallpox planning.
The disease, which historically killed 30 percent of its victims, was once
one of the world's most feared. At the same time, experts estimate that
the vaccine will kill one or two out of every million people being
vaccinated for the first time, and 15 will suffer life-threatening side
effects.
The major question being debated within the White House is how fast to
proceed in offering the shot to the general public.
There is widespread agreement, though, on the first stage of vaccinations.
A second stage is likely to cover other health care workers and first
responders, totaling as many as 10 million people nationally.
As they begin vaccinating, federal and state authorities will mount an
education campaign to help people decide whether to get the shot.
In the end, each person will be forced to consider the same questions Bush
and other top federal officials have been struggling with for months, said
Dr. Jimmy Guidry, state health officer for Louisiana.
"It boils down to an individual perception," he said. "Is this risk real
or not?"
Copyright © 2002, The Associated Press |