Officials look to head off issue of injury compensation
ASSOCIATED PRESS
WASHINGTON, Oct. 24
The Bush administration is preparing to ask a lame-duck Congress
to address one of the stickiest issues in the smallpox vaccine
debate: how to compensate people who are injured or killed by
the vaccine itself.
A number of health care workers and volunteers would simply not be
willing to give the vaccine without some sort of liability
protection.
SEN. BILL FRIST, R-TENN.
ONE
OPTION is a large fund that victims who develop serious medical
problems could tap into, modeled after an existing compensation fund
for childhood vaccines. Another approach would be to protect nurses
and other health workers who administer the shots from lawsuits
without setting aside money for compensation.
Administration officials say the issue must be resolved
before the government begins offering the effective but risky
vaccine in an effort to protect people from a disease not seen for
decades but feared as a bioterror agent.
A number of health care workers and volunteers would simply
not be willing to give the vaccine without some sort of liability
protection, said Sen. Bill Frist, R-Tenn., who has been pushing for
a resolution to this issue.
Congress does not return to Washington until the week after
the Nov. 5 elections.
Officials estimate that
15 people will face life-threatening injuries for every million
vaccinated, and one or two will die.
Frist said nothing can move during the limited lame duck
congressional session without bipartisan agreement. And anything
that limits the right to sue could be controversial, he said.
President Bush also could handle the liability issue
administratively, officials said. That would involve drafting people
who administer the vaccine into the National Health Service Corp.,
which could protect them from lawsuits under the Federal Tort Claims
Act.
But that would do nothing to protect hospitals or other
facilities where the vaccine is delivered, Frist said. Plus, there
are logistical hurdles to drafting so many people into the corps,
especially if vaccination is being administered on an emergency
basis in response to an attack.
Top federal health officials have recommended making the
vaccine available to people in stages, beginning with people who
work in hospital emergency rooms, then to other health care workers
and emergency responders and finally to the general public.
MAJOR UNRESOLVED
ISSUE
The White House is still considering how quickly to move,
whether to wait until the vaccine is licensed or offer it more
quickly. Beyond those questions, the liability question is the only
major unresolved issue, officials say.
Smallpox's
rise and fall
Time line of a scourge
1754-1767
British forces in North America distribute tainted
blankets to "disaffected tribes," marking first use of
smallpox as an intentional weapon.
1796
Edward Jenner demonstrates that cowpox inoculation can
guard against smallpox.
1967
World Health Organization launches global vaccination
campaign against smallpox.
1971
Smallpox's eradication leads U.S. to discontinue routine
vaccination.
1977
Last naturally occurring case of smallpox reported in
Somalia.
1980
WHO certifies that the world is free of naturally
occurring smallpox. Soviets begin to develop smallpox as a
bioweapon.
1982
Vaccine production is discontinued in the United States.
1990
U.S. military discontinues routine vaccinations.
Today
Smallpox vaccinations are generally limited to selected
lab workers and military personnel.
Most of the fear
surrounding smallpox is about the disease itself: It is highly
contagious, has no known treatment and historically has killed 30
percent of its victims. While it was declared eradicated from earth
in 1980, experts fear that Iraq or terrorist groups may secretly
have the smallpox virus and unleash it in an act of germ warfare.
Routine vaccinations ended in the United States in 1972, and
experts believe that those last vaccinated more than three decades
ago have little residual immunity remaining.
But the decision to offer the vaccine is a difficult one
because the vaccine itself is so dangerous. Its made with a live
virus called vaccinia that can cause serious damage both to people
vaccinated and to those with whom they come into close contact.
RISK OF SERIOUS
REACTIONS
The most common serious reaction comes when vaccinia escapes
from the inoculation site, often because people touch the site and
then touch their eyes or mouth or someone else. For instance, the
virus transferred to the eye can cause blindness.
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deadly is encephalitis, which can cause paralysis or permanent
neurologic damage. Also fatal: progressive vaccinia, where the virus
spreads, eating away at flesh, bone and gut.
People would be told the risks before they are vaccinated.
Still, officials are considering how to compensate people who
get the shots and are injured.
Under one plan, Congress would bar lawsuits and, instead,
establish a federal fund to compensate injured patients, according
to two officials involved in the smallpox vaccine planning. Its
unclear how much money would be needed or how much each injured
person would be entitled to, they said Wednesday, speaking on
condition of anonymity.
It could be modeled on the National Vaccine Injury
Compensation Program, which gives money to people who are injured by
a variety of childhood and other regularly administered vaccines.
Another option, Frist said, is for Congress to extend the
Federal Tort Claims Act to those involved in smallpox vaccinations.
Under this approach, the federal government would defend any lawsuit
brought and pay any damages. The case would be tried in federal, not
state, court, and be heard by a judge not a jury, he said. In
addition, there could be a ban or limit on punitive damages.
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?"