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12:07am (UK)
Britain 'Bought Wrong
Smallpox Vaccine'
By Gavin Cordon, Whitehall Editor, PA News
The Government has bought the wrong
vaccine to protect the country from the threat of a smallpox
attack by terrorists, it was claimed today.
A leading American authority on the subject said the Lister
vaccine ordered by the Department of Health had not been proven
to work against the so-called “battle-strain” of virus obtained
by Iraq.
Steve Prior, of the Potomac Institute who has carried out new
research on the smallpox threat, told The Times that he believed
Britain’s vaccine choice was “indefensible”.
He said the US government had selected an alternative vaccine
developed by the New York City Board of Health which had proved
successful against endemic smallpox in India from which the
“battle-strain” was developed.
“I was very surprised ... for the Department of Health to
suddenly come out and say ‘we know something about the threat
that nobody else knows that means we have to have Lister’ was
very surprising,” Dr Prior said.
“When you are making decisions of this magnitude, you cannot
afford to make the wrong one and you certainly cannot afford to
make it for the wrong reasons ... I think it is indefensible.”
However the Department of Health, which placed the £28 million
order for the vaccine, insisted that it was acting on expert
medical and scientific advice.
A spokesman said that it had chosen the same vaccine as other
European nations.
“The decision to purchase the Lister vaccine was based on the
expert medical and scientific advice that we and the Ministry of
Defence had,” the spokesman said.
“As far as we are concerned it is the best we can get which is
why we bought it.”
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