Elizabeth Cohen: Vaccine shortage critical
September 17, 2002 Posted: 1:37 PM EDT (1737 GMT)
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CNN's Elizabeth Cohen
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(CNN) -- A new government study spotlights a critical shortage
in the nation's stockpile of childhood vaccines. All but one state has had
to ration vaccines and lawmakers in Washington are planning to take up the
issue. CNN medical correspondent Elizabeth Cohen has the latest
developments.
COHEN: According to this report by the General Accounting Office,
there are eight vaccines that children are supposed to get, and over the
past two years, there have been shortages of five of those eight vaccines.
And the results of that are that 49 states have begun some form of rationing
of the vaccines. And because of the shortages, most states have changed
their vaccine requirements.
In other words, they waived the requirements for kids to go to school or
day care, or they said, you know, you can get them later. The vaccines have
been very, very effective with these diseases -- diphtheria, measles, mumps,
polio. There is a concern that these diseases could slowly begin to creep
back into the population, not overnight, but slowly.
Why has there been these shortages? There are several reasons. The
biggest one is that not enough companies are making them. In 1967, 26
companies made vaccines. In 2002, 12 companies make vaccines.
In other words, there is only one company making five of these vaccines.
So that any little problem that that company has means that there is a
shortage of that vaccine and vaccines are difficult to make. They take a
long time. They're technically a complicated process.
HEMMER: Two questions then: What do you do about it? And given the
shortages you just described to us, are things getting any better?
COHEN: Well, what the General Accounting Office says is that there
are two things that the government can think about. First of all, the FDA
has what's called fast-tracking of drugs. In other words, the review process
would be faster than usual. And they say they ought to think about putting
some of these vaccines on fast track, because there are some vaccines in the
pipeline.
Secondly, the CDC is supposed to have a six-month stockpile of all
childhood vaccines, and they don't. They are required by law to. That's
another thing that the General Accounting Office brings up.
Is it getting better? And the answer is, according to the CDC, yes. They
said, in July, that production for all but one of the vaccines where there
have been shortages is beginning to step up.
But the General Accounting Office says any one problem for any one of
these vaccines means a shortage in the future. The system is very vulnerable
to shortages.
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