TLANTA,
June 21 The decision by a government advisory panel to recommend smallpox
vaccination for about 15,000 health care and law enforcement workers raises
logistical and ethical issues involving not just the people who will get the
vaccine but also those who will come in contact with them.
If experience from the time when smallpox vaccine was routinely administered
to the public is a guide, doctors say, some of the 15,000 "first responders" who
receive the vaccine may suffer serious potentially even deadly
complications. Steps may also have to be taken to protect certain people who
come in contact with others who receive the vaccine, which infects recipients
with live vaccinia virus, a relative of smallpox. Because those vaccinated can
shed this virus, they can spread its smallpox protection as well as its
complications.
The risk is especially high for people with a history of common skin
conditions like eczema and those whose immune systems are weakened by treatment
for cancer, infection with the AIDS virus or other conditions. So some doctors
say it may be necessary to screen potential recipients before offering them the
vaccine.
The panel, the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, recommended
vaccination for two teams of designated health workers in each state: public
health officials who would investigate the initial cases in a smallpox attack
and medical personnel in hospitals that government officials would designate to
care for smallpox victims.
The number of teams would vary with the population and geography of each
state. The plan calls for at least one health care treatment team for every
million in population. It was not clear how the policy, if adopted, would deal
with workers in these hospitals who chose not to be vaccinated.
Government officials have recommended against widespread vaccination because,
in the absence of a known smallpox threat, the vaccine's dangers seem to
outweigh its benefits. Smallpox vaccine has a significantly higher risk of
serious side effects than other vaccines.
If the panel's recommendations are adopted as policy, the immunizations would
be the largest number given in this country since it stopped routine smallpox
vaccinations in 1972. Until now, the government has restricted use of smallpox
vaccine to scientists who work with smallpox and related viruses in a
laboratory. About 11,000 such workers have received the vaccine since 1983, said
Dr. Harold Margolis, an official with the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention here.
After the anthrax attacks last fall, the disease centers asked the panel to
determine whether more Americans should get the vaccine.
In choosing a relatively small group, the panel did not decide on the
logistics for putting the recommendations into effect and left the planning for
that up to the government. That, too, will not be an easy task, said the panel's
chairman, Dr. John F. Modlin of Dartmouth Medical School. Among problems needing
resolution is who will pay compensation to workers who develop vaccine
complications.
Dr. Julie L. Gerberding, the acting deputy director of the centers, the
federal agency that would have primary responsibility for monitoring the policy,
said the C.D.C. would work out the plans "over the next several months."
By early 2003, the government expects to have enough vaccine made from a new
technique to protect every American. But until then a high priority is to make
sure that available vaccine is used efficiently in case it is needed in an
emergency.
Although many states have begun assembling the teams, fall seems the earliest
that the first team members would receive vaccinations.
The government owns all smallpox vaccine, which it classifies as
"investigational." That means each recipient's written consent would be required
after its considerable dangers are explained.
Vaccination will be voluntary, and issues of confidentiality concerning a
person's health could pose problems.
"There's no single answer, and the states will have to talk it through," Dr.
Margolis said.
Sore arms, swollen lymph nodes and fever can occur in up to 50 percent of
recipients. Because the vaccinia is live, it can spread to cause severe skin
infections, sometimes destroying tissue and causing permanent disability. Or
vaccinia can be spread just to the eye and permanently blind. Vaccinia can also
cause brain damage from encephalitis in about 1 in 100,000 vaccination
recipients and death in about 1 in 1 million recipients.
Some complications can be modified by injection of a natural substance known
as vaccine immune globulin, which is derived from the blood of people who have
been vaccinated against smallpox. But there is only enough of the substance to
treat about 600 patients.
Although many of the 11,000 vaccine recipients since 1983 have had to stay
out of work for a few days, none have needed vaccine immune globulin, Dr.
Margolis said.
But when about 125 health workers were vaccinated at the disease centers last
fall, doctors who gave the injections were surprised by the number and severity
of adverse reactions. Many recipients were treated with antibiotics in the
erroneous belief that the site of vaccination had become infected. Older doctors
who had given smallpox vaccine in decades past told their younger colleagues
that the skin reactions were from the vaccine. Doctors who conducted recent
trials to test the safety and effectiveness of diluting the vaccine had a
similar experience.
Another potential problem is that a recipient can inadvertently pass on
vaccinia to other people who have not consented to a vaccination.
"If you get immunized with vaccinia, you can infect people around you from
your vaccinia scab," Dr. Gerberding said. "So while you may accept the risk for
yourself, you would be imparting a risk to your contacts."
A question that the panel did not address, but that is likely to arise, is
whether to do an H.I.V. blood test before a person is vaccinated.
When the centers immunized a number of workers last fall, the recipients were
asked if they were infected with H.I.V., but a blood test was not performed.
H.I.V. tests have been required for other smallpox vaccine recipients.
ALL INFORMATION, DATA, AND
MATERIAL CONTAINED, PRESENTED, OR PROVIDED HERE IS FOR GENERAL INFORMATION
PURPOSES ONLY AND IS NOT TO BE CONSTRUED AS 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?"