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US health care workers spurn Bush smallpox vaccination plan
World Socialist Web Site ^ | 1 March 2003 | Patrick Martin

Posted on 03/03/2003 12:44:33 PM PST by Paleo Conservative

World Socialist Web Site www.wsws.org

WSWS : News & Analysis : North America

US health care workers spurn Bush smallpox vaccination plan

By Patrick Martin
1 March 2003

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The vast majority of the health care workers who were to be inoculated against smallpox over the past month, under plans linked to the Bush administration’s preparations for war with Iraq, have declined the vaccine. By February 24, one month into the program, just over 7,300 volunteers have been inoculated, compared to projections by federal officials of 450,000 to 500,000.

There is growing and increasingly vocal opposition to the vaccination plan, despite the attempts of the White House and the Department of Health and Human Services to manufacture a crisis atmosphere over the supposed threat of a germ warfare attack from Iraq or Al Qaeda. Some criticism focuses on the administration’s refusal to provide compensation for those who suffer from the well-known side effects of the vaccine.

More fundamental, however, is the widespread suspicion that the threat of smallpox has been deliberately exaggerated by the administration to scare the public and win support for its policy of war against Iraq. With the United States on the brink of war, the mass rejection of smallpox vaccination by health care workers is tantamount to a vote of no confidence. It gives a far truer indication of the popular attitude towards the government’s war plans than those opinion polls which claim majority support for bombing and invading Iraq.

The administration has presented no evidence that Iraq possesses the smallpox virus, let alone the ability to use it as a weapon against the American people. Smallpox is the only communicable disease to have been completely eradicated on a worldwide scale, through aggressive public health and vaccination programs in the post-World War II period. The last case internationally was reported in 1978, the last case in the US dates back more than 50 years. Two laboratories—the federal Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta, and a Russian government facility in Siberia—are the only remaining repositories of the virus.

It is a historical fact that only one country is known to have seriously considered the use of smallpox as a weapon of war in the twentieth century—the United States, which contemplated using it in Vietnam. The US Army considered sowing smallpox on the Ho Chi Minh Trail in 1966, but eventually discarded the idea. (There is also the sordid history of the selling of smallpox-infected blankets to Indian tribes in colonial America, a primitive form of germ warfare. European colonists were immune from the disease because of childhood exposure, but native Americans were not. Many tribes were entirely wiped out in this way.)

A politically motivated campaign

The Bush administration’s sudden shift on smallpox inoculation underscores that the campaign is politically motivated. As recently as last June—more than nine months after the September 11 terrorist attacks—federal health authorities disclaimed any intention of pushing for mass inoculations. An advisory panel proposed at that time to limit inoculations to 20,000 medical personnel who were most likely to come into contact with victims of the disease.

In October, however, in conjunction with the Bush administration’s drive to win authorization from Congress for war with Iraq, federal health officials reversed themselves and proposed a much wider program, beginning with 500,000 health care workers, expanding to 10 million emergency responders (police, fire, rescue) and then the bulk of the American population as early as 2004.

This would entail colossal risks from side effects of the vaccine. Published estimates have put the number of deaths arising from the vaccination of 200 million Americans at between 200 and 482—more than in any terrorist attack except September 11 itself—with 3,000 people suffering life-threatening complications, and 160,000 suffering serious side effects, ranging from blindness in one or both eyes to skin conditions so severe they would amount to disfigurement.

Even these numbers are likely gross underestimates, because of significant changes both in the supply of vaccine and in the underlying health of the American people. Much of the vaccine being administered now is the frozen leftover of vaccines used in the mass inoculation campaigns of the 1950s and 1960s. Whether the vaccine will have the same effectiveness or carry the same risks as 40 years ago is unknown.

The smallpox vaccine has particularly devastating effects on those who suffer from preexisting skin conditions like eczema, or from immune deficiencies, either from diseases like HIV/AIDS, lupus and rheumatoid arthritis, or as a byproduct of chemotherapy and drug treatment for cancer or organ transplants. Immuno-deficient patients exposed to the vaccine can contract a condition called progressive vaccinia, in which the sore normally produced by vaccination grows uncontrollably, causing systemic infection. There is no cure for progressive vaccinia and the death rate, 36 percent, is comparable to that of smallpox itself.

The number of such potential victims of the vaccine is in the tens of millions today, because of the spread of HIV and the advances in cancer treatment and organ transplant techniques. Any vaccination program would have to locate these individuals and exclude them from inoculation—a task fraught with difficulties ranging from privacy concerns to simple ignorance and human error.

There is also great concern in the medical community because inoculated health care workers frequently come into contact with immuno-compromised individuals in the course of their daily work. They can become a source of infection because the smallpox vaccine is based on a live virus.

The Bush administration has carried out mass inoculations rapidly in the armed forces, with more than 100,000 military personnel receiving the vaccine with only a handful of reported serious complications and no deaths. Far different results could be expected when the program shifts from a group selected for youth and good health to the general population.

There have been two dozen cases of serious complications from the first inoculations among health care workers, but only fragmentary reports are as yet available. Federal health officials announced February 27 that three serious adverse reactions had been observed in Florida alone, including one case of generalized vaccinia that could lead to permanent scarring.

Immunity for drug companies

The Bush administration clearly anticipated a significant toll from the side effects of the vaccine. Only days after the announcement of the vaccination plan, congressional Republicans slipped new language into the bill establishing the Department of Homeland Security providing immunity from liability for drug companies that manufacture the vaccine and for hospitals and doctors who administer it. At the same time, the administration rejected calls to establish a fund to compensate those who suffered severe side effects from receiving the vaccine.

This grotesque double standard—one law for giant corporations and another for ordinary people—is characteristic of the administration’s policies in virtually every sphere. There were soon protests, however, from organizations representing health care workers who were to be the first guinea pigs for the mass vaccination plan.

The Service Employees International Union and the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees urged their members not to be vaccinated. The American Nurses’ Association expressed reservations, and numerous state branches, including California, Texas, Massachusetts, Rhode Island and Connecticut, urged nurses not to participate.

Hundreds of hospitals have refused to inoculate their employees, mainly because of concerns over possible secondary infections for immune-deficient patients. Two state governments—Michigan and Arizona—and the New York City Health Department have all declined to begin vaccinations until a compensation program is put into place for those suffering side effects.

Spokesmen for the medical community have criticized the administration for pouring tens of millions of dollars into a nonexistent crisis while ignoring genuine health care needs. Dr. Paul Offitt of Children’s Hospital in Philadelphia, the only member of Bush administration’s advisory panel to vote against the vaccination plan, said, “Flu will kill 20,000 people this year, mostly less than four years old—and we have a vaccine. It’s too bad that Saddam Hussein’s not behind influenza. We’d be doing a better job.”

The credibility of the Bush administration’s warnings of impending attack is also being questioned. Dr. William Schaffner, chairman of preventive medicine at Vanderbilt University Medical Center in Nashville, Tennessee, told the Washington Post, “It is not enough for someone—whether it is the president or the secretary of state—to say, ‘I’m worried about this; trust me.’ We need more than that today as a profession and as a society.”

 



Copyright 1998-2003
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Extended News; Foreign Affairs; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: bioterrorism; smallpox; socialism
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"All rights reserved," my a$#!

This is from a socialist website. Socialists don't believe in property rights. Therfore I will not observe any that that they claim.

1 posted on 03/03/2003 12:44:34 PM PST by Paleo Conservative
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To: David Hunter; bonesmccoy; Jim Noble; LadyDoc

Ping!


2 posted on 03/03/2003 12:45:40 PM PST by Paleo Conservative (This space left intentionally blank.)
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To: Paleo Conservative
The Bush administration’s sudden shift on smallpox inoculation underscores that the campaign is politically motivated

Or that we dont have intelligence on the matter therefore we cant make an assertion that maybe credible evidence came up that such an attack is possible?

No...Bush is a warmonger captializing on our fears... *sigh*

3 posted on 03/03/2003 12:51:44 PM PST by smith288 (Singes qui capitulent et mangent du fromage)
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To: Paleo Conservative
BS. We start shots soon. I'm one of the first scheduled to receive it.
4 posted on 03/03/2003 12:51:53 PM PST by arkfreepdom
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To: Paleo Conservative
All they have to do is see the results of one case of smallpoxs - the horrible disfigurement if not the actual death-- and they'll change their tune, and their minds, PTQ.
5 posted on 03/03/2003 1:09:39 PM PST by yankeedame ("Oh, I can take it, but I'd much rather dish it out.")
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To: arkfreepdom
BS. We start shots soon.

I'm not saying I agree with the article, I'm just posting enemy propaganda so we can vivisect it. I'm not a health care worker, and I'm outraged that I can't get revaccinated yet. I would prefer to be vaccinated with the safer MVA vaccine developed by Bararian Nordic, because I have a history of eczema.

6 posted on 03/03/2003 1:10:18 PM PST by Paleo Conservative (This space left intentionally blank.)
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To: yankeedame
All they have to do is see the results of one case of smallpoxs -

Problem is that by the time the first cases are diagnosed there could be thousands who have been exposed but are too far along with their own smallpox cases to be vaccinated. Supposedly one can be vaccinated up to four days after exposure to smallpox and still be protected.

7 posted on 03/03/2003 1:13:28 PM PST by Paleo Conservative (This space left intentionally blank.)
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To: arkfreepdom
My Hospital in North Carolina has decided the we would not be given the vaccines until cases started showing up. This is from the Medical Director and the Hospital Administrator.
8 posted on 03/03/2003 1:16:06 PM PST by carolina_rn7
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To: Paleo Conservative
I had no problem with the vaccine as child and felt that if soldiers can be shot at in the field it's the least I can do. I am not criticizing anyone for not taking it. That is just my personal feelings.
9 posted on 03/03/2003 1:18:53 PM PST by arkfreepdom
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To: Paleo Conservative
Problem is that by the time the first cases are diagnosed there could be thousands who have been exposed but are too far along with their own smallpox cases to be vaccinated. Supposedly one can be vaccinated up to four days after exposure to smallpox and still be protected.

All I can say is: "Oh?....Oh...Yeah?...Well...Well...I knew that...I was just...um...I was just seeing if anybody else did...so there..."

But seriously, hat in hand, I bow to your expertise.

10 posted on 03/03/2003 1:19:12 PM PST by yankeedame ("Oh, I can take it, but I'd much rather dish it out.")
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To: Paleo Conservative
The Bush administration’s sudden shift on smallpox inoculation underscores that the campaign is politically motivated.

It's truly amazing just how deeply ingrained projection is in the liberal/socialist mindset. It's actually the resistance to the vaccination that is politically motivated. If Slick Willie had given the order, most of these people would have lined up for the shot with no questions asked.

11 posted on 03/03/2003 1:20:08 PM PST by jpl
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To: carolina_rn7
Both my sisters work in a hospital (in IS not medical), my brother is a doctor at a different one, he told them & our parents NOT to get the shot until & unless cases started showing up.
12 posted on 03/03/2003 1:21:03 PM PST by nina0113
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To: carolina_rn7
If the medical communnity abrogates their responsibility to be prepared as they should, they will have much to answer for when they begin to spread highly infectious diseases to their patients.

First responders and those with patient contact have an obligation to protect themselves from becoming a conduit for transmission.

Shame on them.

13 posted on 03/03/2003 1:23:07 PM PST by Damocles (sword of..)
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To: nina0113
No offense, but if you wait until cases show up there will be two problems:

1. Mass panic and a run on vaccination supplies limiting the ability to effectively distribute.

2. An infected patient can be contagious for up to 10 days without showing symptoms which means the first case reported will mean a massive amount of exposure to those in contact with this person.

The medical community has an obligation to protect themselves in order to not spread the disease.

14 posted on 03/03/2003 1:27:20 PM PST by Damocles (sword of..)
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To: carolina_rn7
My Hospital in North Carolina has decided the we would not be given the vaccines until cases started showing up.

So if there is an outbreak, hospitals will be a source of new infections, great. I sure hope the survivors of an outbreak are allowed to sue the hospital administration. Also, they better hope the strains of variola used in attack haven't been genetically engineered to reduce the incubation time.

15 posted on 03/03/2003 1:30:50 PM PST by Paleo Conservative (This space left intentionally blank.)
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Comment #16 Removed by Moderator

To: carolina_rn7
Your medical directors are in bed with your local and very powerful Gay Agenda. They don't want this vaccine given to health workers. They can't take the vaccine and don't want the health care workers to get the vaccine as they might get the disease on a health care visit.

17 posted on 03/03/2003 1:33:58 PM PST by Grampa Dave (Stamp out Freepathons! Stop being a Freep Loader! Become a monthly donor!)
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To: arkfreepdom; carolina_rn7
Here's the latest information from Bavarian Nordic about testing of their safe smallpox vaccine.

Announcement No. 05-03
26 February 2003

Bavarian Nordic initiates Phase II of the clinical development of MVA-BN as a safe smallpox vaccine

As stated in Bavarian Nordic’s announcement of yesterday, US Secretary of Health Tommy G. Thompson has awarded Bavarian Nordic A/S a three-year contract to develop the company’s proprietary MVA-BN safe smallpox vaccine for the US government.

Whilst the US contract supports early development, Bavarian Nordic is now entering into a Phase II clinical study.

The study will further evaluate the safety and immunogenicity of MVA-BN in 165 healthy volunteers. The study will be conducted in Switzerland and enrolment will commence during March 2003.

This announcement follows the completion of Bavarian Nordic’s Phase I clinical trial that is the only study evaluating safe smallpox vaccines to be completed worldwide. The Phase I clinical trial evaluated the safety of various doses of MVA-BN in a total of 86 healthy volunteers and has generated extremely encouraging results demonstrating the great potential of MVA-BN as a safe smallpox vaccine. The highest dose of MVA-BN was well tolerated with no reports of any serious adverse events.

Importantly, at this dose MVA-BN was also shown to induce high levels of immunity (antibody and cellular immune response) in 100% of individuals who had previously not been vaccinated against smallpox. Moreover, MVA-BN was also well tolerated and significantly boosted the immune responses (antibody and cellular immune response) in people that had previously been vaccinated against smallpox many years before.

Bavarian Nordic is now the only company to have already completed small animal studies and a clinical Phase I trial, demonstrating the excellent safety and immunogenicity of MVA-BN and the superiority over other MVA strains. In addition, Bavarian Nordic is the only company who has already produced and supplied commercial quantities of MVA.

Peter Wulff, President and CEO of Bavarian Nordic: “Bavarian Nordic is now taking a huge step in the clinical development and licensure of MVA-BN by entering clinical Phase II studies. This achievement makes us the leading company developing a safe smallpox vaccine”.

Further information regarding the data from Phase I and the plans for Phase II trials will be presented by Mr. Peter Wulff, President & CEO of Bavarian Nordic, at the BIO-CEO conference in New York, today 26 February 2003 at 15.00 hours EST.

Copenhagen, 26 February 2003


18 posted on 03/03/2003 1:35:33 PM PST by Paleo Conservative (This space left intentionally blank.)
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To: carolina_rn7
I was at a meeting last week where bioterror was discussed. One of the points our hospital epidemiologist made was that only 1% of those scheduled to be vaccinated by now have been. All I could think was, if this is how it's going when we're NOT in a panic situation, then why on earth do these folks things are going to go more smoothly when we ARE in a panic situation?

One of the points this guy made in another lecture was that his personal opinion is that the smallpox vaccine program is unfair and unjust because the gov't isn't paying for other vaccines for diseases that kill more people. But how many of these other organisms for which we have vaccines have been weaponized??? None that I know of.

Sigh. I understand that the medical environment has changed considerably since the 60's and so I can respect the medical/scientific reasons for being cautious. But I really get frustrated w/the liberal bias.
19 posted on 03/03/2003 1:39:56 PM PST by iceskater
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To: Paleo Conservative
Thanks for the info.
20 posted on 03/03/2003 1:41:34 PM PST by arkfreepdom
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