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"Protecting the health
and informed consent rights of children since 1982."
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THE WASHINGTON POST
To view the entire article,
go to
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A34768-2002Sep3.html
Smallpox Vaccination for Medical Workers Proposed
By Ceci Connolly
Federal health officials have recommended that President Bush
adopt a
multiphase smallpox
vaccination program for emergency medical personnel
considered most at risk in
the event of a bioterrorist attack. Some of those
officials estimate that as
many as a half-million hospital workers could be
offered the vaccine.
Health and Human Services Secretary Tommy G. Thompson said
yesterday that
he has sent to the White
House a plan designed to ensure the nation is
adequately prepared to
contain an outbreak should terrorists attempt to use
the deadly virus as a
weapon.
"We have to be concerned about any contingency that
develops," he said. "We
are prepared to go if and
when it's required."
Even as he awaits Bush's decision, Thompson said he is moving
quickly to
resolve the legal, ethical
and regulatory challenges to what would be the
first broad-scale smallpox
vaccination program in three decades.
"We are preparing plans for vaccinating," he said.
Already, Thompson has
concluded that the federal
government would assume liability for any adverse
side effects associated with
the vaccine. He is also pressing for the speedy
licensing of the vaccine by
the Food and Drug Administration.
The decision on whether to resume inoculations is dominated by two
uncertain risks: the
likelihood of a smallpox attack and the danger of
receiving the live vaccine
with its serious, even fatal, side effects.
Smallpox was declared eradicated worldwide in 1980, and only the
United
States and Russia are known
to hold small quantities of the virus. But many
experts fear that a rogue
nation or a terrorist group could acquire it.
"We can speculate, and people are [speculating] that North
Korea and Iraq
[have] it and possibly Iran
and France," Thompson said in an interview. "And
with that information,
there's no question we have to be concerned about it
and, therefore, we're
getting prepared, especially if there is a war with
Iraq."
Israel, for example, recently expanded its smallpox vaccinations,
citing
concerns that Iraq could
launch a biological weapons attack on that country
if the United States struck
Iraq.
In June, a federal advisory panel recommended voluntary
vaccinations for
small teams of medical
workers in each state. The chairman of the panel,
Dartmouth Medical School's
John Modlin, estimated that would translate into
10,000 to 20,000 people.
A month later, Thompson's two top bioterrorism experts, D. A.
Henderson and
Jerome Hauer, said that they
expected the number to be in excess of 250,000
health care workers -- and
many more people if other first responders such
as firefighters and police
officers are also vaccinated. "At the end of the
day, the numbers could be
significantly greater than 500,000," Hauer said in
an interview at the time.
When asked yesterday in an interview if the thinking at HHS has
changed
since then, Thompson replied:
"No, no." He declined to elaborate on the
details of his
recommendation to the White House but said he is "confident
that they will make the
right decision, and that decision will be made some
time in the month of
September."
If Bush approves the plan, state health officials would determine
who would
be offered the vaccine. The
smallpox vaccine consists of live virus that can
cause more serious
complications than those caused by other vaccines. Some
of the side effects include
aches, fever, brain inflammation and even death.
One adviser said last week that HHS is still struggling with the
logistics
of administering hundreds of
thousands of vaccine shots in short order.
"Who is going to administer the vaccine?" this person
asked. "What about
the shelf life of it? You're
not going to take a 500-dose vial and only
vaccinate 250 people."
The federal government has about 100 million doses of old vaccine,
some of
which could be safely
diluted so more people could be vaccinated. If that
vaccine was given today, it
would be offered as an experimental treatment
that requires the recipient
to sign a complex consent form. Thompson said he
is rushing to get the FDA to
license the old stocks so that the consent
forms would not be
necessary. He added that he anticipates a similar
approval process for the new
vaccine being produced by Acambis Inc.
"The best of all worlds would be to have it licensed,"
he said.
Hospital workers would be the first to be offered the vaccine
because
analysts expect the first
patients infected with the virus to go to local
emergency rooms.
Initially, HHS officials expected that vaccinated health care
personnel
would need to take about 10
days off to prevent live vaccinia in the vaccine
from being transmitted
inadvertently to patients, who could then experience
complications. Hospital
officials have been clamoring for information on how
they would fill those slots
and who would pay for temporary workers.
But Thompson's advisers said yesterday that the risk of
transmission
appears lower than thought.
"We might not need to furlough people," said
Hauer. "It's being
looked at."
Although the risk of a smallpox attack first reached the public
consciousness last fall in
the wake of the Sept. 11 attacks, Thompson said
it has been a high priority
since his first days in office. "I was not
pleased with where we
were," he said. "I immediately started looking at ways
to accelerate the smallpox
contract."
Yesterday, Acambis announced that it had tested its new vaccine on
30
people and had found it as
safe as the earlier vaccine.
Sen. Bill Frist (R-Tenn.), a surgeon, wrote recently that once
enough
vaccine has been stockpiled,
Americans should be able to decide for
themselves whether to accept
the risks of inoculation.
"I believe the threat of a smallpox attack outweighs the
risks of providing
smallpox vaccinations to a
well-informed public," he said
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