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September 17,
2002
Senate hearing
examines vaccine shortage

By Katrina
Woznicki
UPI Science News
WASHINGTON, Sept. 17 (UPI) -- A shortage of childhood vaccines
in the United States seems to have improved temporarily after 18 months,
although the nation remains vulnerable to future disruptions if the
vaccine supply cannot be increased, a new government report concludes.
The report, released by the General Accounting Office on Tuesday
and requested by the U.S. Senate last January, suggested difficulties
within the vaccine manufacturing industry have contributed to this
public health problem.
"Physicians have been forced to turn away young patients," said
Sen. Jack Reed, D-R.I., chairman of the Health, Education, Labor and
Pensions subcommittee on public health, at a hearing on the issue.
"State and local public health officials have been left scrambling for
vaccine supplies," Reed said. "School departments have had to waive
immunization requirements for entry, leaving young children vulnerable
to potentially devastating -- yet entirely preventable -- diseases such
as measles, rubella, and even chicken pox."
Although problems within the vaccine manufacturing industry had a
direct effect on some children having to forgo immunizations, the
shortage had multiple causes, said Jan Heinrich, GAO's director of
health care and public health issues. Nevertheless, "the vaccine supply
remains vulnerable to disruptions in the future," Heinrich told
senators.
One problem is the lengthy vaccine production schedule, which
prevents manufacturers from responding in a timely fashion to changes in
demand.
Another problem, Heinrich explained, is so few companies in the
United States make the vaccines. If one company suffers production
difficulties -- such as failing inspection regulations -- or decides for
whatever reason to withdraw its product from the market, the health care
system is left searching for alternatives.
Reed pointed out there are only four major manufacturers producing
almost all of the vaccines American children need. One of those
companies is Aventis Pasteur North America, located in Swiftwater, Pa.
Its executive vice president, Wayne Pisano, told the subcommittee
vaccines the small number of manufacturers makes the vaccine supply
quite susceptible to fluctuations in the business, and federal programs
to keep vaccine price tags low "may provide short-term savings for the
government," Pisano said, "but ultimately contribute to the supply
problem."
While the vaccine industry has been trying re-balance supply and
demand, school children throughout the country have been skipping
routine vaccinations. For example, according to the report, the
Minnesota Department of Health suspended school and post-secondary
immunizations laws for the tetanus-diphtheria vaccine and diphtheria
booster shot for a second consecutive year. The suspension extends into
the 2002-2003 school year, which just got underway.
South Carolina and Washington State also allowed children to attend
day care facilities or school when they had not received all of their
immunizations, the report said. Immunizations also may vary greatly from
state to state, Heinrich explained, because each jurisdiction can follow
its own vaccination policies.
"The real life impact of these shortages can not be denied,"
Timothy Dolan, a pediatrician from Baltimore who spoke on behalf of the
American Academy of Pediatrics.
"An estimated 11,000 babies are born each day in the United States,
each requiring 20 doses of vaccine by age 18 months to be protected
against 11 childhood diseases, Dolan said. "A vaccine shortage quickly
impacts thousands of families every day."
Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash. echoed that finding. "I know that in
Washington state shortages have resulted in delays that may cost lives,"
she said. "My state recently announced that there are no longer any
shortages of required childhood immunizations. However, meeting the
needs of 'catch up' kids ... could still result in delays."
Murray asked Heinrich if the GAO had found any evidence delays in
childhood vaccinations had resulted in a spike in infectious diseases.
Heinrich responded the GAO had no such evidence, adding if any such
illnesses have occurred, it will take time before they can be reported
and documented. "There will always be a lag time in the reporting of
infectious diseases," Heinrich said.
Although the shortage problem appears to have abated temporarily,
Heinrich said, the federal government sorely needs to develop an overall
strategy to prevent another lapse. Congress appears interested in doing
just that. Sen. Bill Frist, R-Tenn., and one of the lawmakers who
requested the GAO report, said the findings are proof the federal
government needs to pass legislation before adjourning in a few months.
Frist has proposed the Improved Vaccine Affordability and
Availability Act, which seeks to expand the vaccine market, stabilize
the vaccine supply, and provide wider access to inoculations.
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