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Flu Shot Reactions Worry
Officials
Almost 1,000 Canadians have
suffered adverse reactions to the flu vaccine in the past two months, Health
Canada has revealed. That's nearly 80 times as many as for the same period last
year.
While the outbreak, dubbed
oculo-respiratory syndrome, is well under control -- resulting in only four
hospitalizations and no deaths -- it has set off alarm bells among
public-health experts, who worry about the country's ability to respond to a
genuine crisis.
"Safety, and the
perception of safety, is key to our immunization programs," Dr. Greg
Hammond, director of public health for Manitoba Health, said yesterday at a
conference in Halifax.
But the syndrome has
highlighted some glaring shortcomings in Canada's vaccination infrastructure,
he told more than 800 delegates attending the Fourth National Immunization
Conference.
The most troubling is an
absence of immunization registries. This means public-health officials do not
know how many doses of the flu vaccine have been administered.
The lack of bar-code
numbering on the products means it would also be impossible to trace
individuals if there turned out to be a serious problem with a vaccine, Dr.
Hammond said. (More than 20 million vaccine doses are administered annually in
Canada, making vaccination the most frequent medical act.)
In addition, a lack of
communications strategy means public-health officials would not be ready to
issue timely warnings, and the lack of research money means it has been a
strain to get experts to turn their attention to this issue, he said.
"This is serious
stuff. We must get it right," he told delegates.
Oculo-respiratory syndrome
is characterized by conjunctivitis (red eyes), respiratory symptoms (cough,
sore throat or wheezing) and occasionally a facial rash that occurs in the
hours after inoculation with the flu vaccine. The symptoms clear up within 48
hours.
Dr. Eleni Galanis of Health
Canada said that 921 cases have been identified since October. Last year, 12
people receiving the flu vaccine reported respiratory problems. (Another
striking contrast is that the United States has recorded 200 cases of this sort
of reaction in the past decade.)
More than half the cases of
oculo-respiratory syndrome (472) were in Quebec, and virtually all of the
reactions (911) have been in people receiving Fluviral, a vaccine manufactured
by BioChem Pharma Inc. of Laval, Que. The company has shipped 3.8 million doses
of the product, largely in Quebec and British Columbia.
Another manufacturer,
Aventis Pasteur Inc. of Toronto, has shipped 5.6 million doses of two other flu
vaccines but the two account for only 10 cases of oculo-respiratory syndrome.
Researchers are not
certain, however, whether the reaction might affect how well the vaccine works.
Data presented at the
conference yesterday revealed that more than three-quarters of the reactions
have been in women and 80 per cent of sufferers are in the 30-59 age group.
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