resident
Bush's plan to vaccinate 500,000 health care workers against smallpox is getting
off to an unexpectedly slow start as hundreds of hospitals and thousands of
nurses across the country say that they will not participate.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said today that only 687
volunteers in 16 states had been vaccinated since the program began two weeks
ago, though it has shipped 250,000 doses of vaccine to 41 states.
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A nationwide survey of state health officials by The New York Times this week
found about 350 hospitals that declined to participate. Hundreds more have not
yet decided.
The vaccination plan is part of the Bush administration's preparation against
a terrorist attack or a war on Iraq, but the White House seemed unfazed by the
slow start.
Scott McClellan, a White House spokesman, said the program was "still very
much in the early stages."
"We are confident that more than enough health care workers will answer the
call so that we are prepared to respond to protect our fellow Americans in the
event of any attack," Mr. McClellan said.
Smallpox experts said they were surprised at the low turnout.
"Given the media attention, I thought people would be much more eager," said
Elizabeth Fenn, a history professor at Duke University who has traced the
disease's history. However, she said, health professionals might be more wary of
the vaccine. When it was last used in the 1960's, it caused up to 52
life-threatening complications and two deaths for every million vaccinations.
No serious reactions have occurred among those vaccinated in the past two
weeks, the disease centers said. Dr. William J. Bicknell, a smallpox expert at
the Boston University School of Public Health who favors vaccinating 10 million
people as quickly as possible, blamed the centers, saying the agency had let
potential volunteers develop exaggerated fears, failed to assure them that they
would be protected in case of bad reactions, and did not publicize the Israeli
and United States military vaccination campaigns, which have had few problems.
On the other hand, Dr. Paul Offit, chief of infectious diseases at Children's
Hospital of Philadelphia and a member of the president's advisory panel on
smallpox vaccination, said he was "surprised," adding, "People are voting with
their arms."
Dr. Offit was the only member of the panel to vote against nationwide
vaccination, and his hospital was quick to back out because it had so many
children with immune systems weakened by cancer treatment or organ transplants.
Public-health and hospital officials concede that they are struggling to find
volunteers. Many health workers say they are skeptical that an attack is
imminent and fear having a bad reaction to the vaccine or infecting a patient or
relative with it.
Many also fear they will not be compensated, whether they lose a day's work
to fever or end up near death from encephalitis.
A number of local health officers, charged with overseeing the vaccinations,
said the vaccinations would sap already tight health budgets. They said the
federal government had seriously understated the real cost of smallpox
vaccinations, which require extensive training, screening and follow-up. "It's
not like lining people up for flu shots at the mall," said Patrick M. Libbey,
director of the National Association of City and County Health Officials, which
has argued that the vaccinations cost $200 to $400 per person, while the disease
centers have estimated it at as little as $13.
Sounding defensive in a telephone news conference yesterday, the centers
director, Dr. Julie Gerberding, urged reporters not to concentrate on the low
participation.
"Our goal is achievement of a preparedness capacity, not achievement of a
number," Dr. Gerberding said. "We recognize that concerns about compensation are
causing people to be slow to volunteer because they're afraid they'll fall
through the cracks."
She declined to say how the issue would be addressed, and some said that
could fuel the frustration of nurses associations that have called for the plan
to be delayed.
"We have nurses calling us from all over the state with questions that we
still don't have answers for," said Clair Jordan, executive director of the
Texas Nurses Association, which has advised its 5,000 members not to volunteer.
Nurses unions in California, Massachusetts, Rhode Island and parts of
Pennsylvania have also advised members not to volunteer.
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"There's problems with protecting my family," said Linda Condon-McMahon, 43,
an emergency-room nurse at Brockton Hospital in Massachusetts, "and protecting
the patients till the site scabs over. Slapping a little bandage on it isn't
going to protect them somebody trips and falls, grabs your arm, and there goes
your bandage."
Of the roughly 350 noncooperating hospitals found by The Times, 175 are in
Texas, which, unlike most other states, last month pressed all of its 550
acute-care hospitals to make a decision.
The high refusal rate "is not surprising at all, nor is it important, as long
as all of our communities will be adequately protected," said Dennis Perrotta,
the Texas epidemiologist.
One of the first hospitals to balk was St. Vincent Infirmary Medical Center
in Little Rock, Ark.
Margaret Preston, a spokeswoman for Catholic Health Initiatives of Erlanger,
Ky., which owns St. Vincent's, said vaccinating workers "puts the patients at
risk, and the risk outweighs the benefits."
Hospital chains have followed suit. The five-hospital Providence Health
Systems in Washington State said it would not want vaccinated employees at work
during the three weeks they could shed virus, and could not afford the resulting
staff shortage.
In Richmond, Va., the Virginia Commonwealth University Health System said it
would not vaccinate until one confirmed case of smallpox appeared in the world.
Dr. Richard Wenzel, the system's head of internal medicine, who treated
smallpox decades ago in Bangladesh, called the decision "purely a medical
risk-benefit assessment."
New Jersey has vaccinated the most so far 97 health workers and police
officers on Jan. 31.
The state's relative success is due to "very robust" communication with
health workers, said Dr. Clifton R. Lacy, the state health commissioner. Also,
he said, "New Jerseyans see themselves as somewhat vulnerable to bioterrorism.
We were the epicenter for the anthrax event, and we still have post office
buildings closed down."
Colorado vaccinated 19 people on Jan. 31 and planned to vaccinate 1,100 soon,
said Dr. Ned Calogne, the state's chief medical officer.
Dr. Calogne was having his third smallpox vaccination, having had one as a
child and one as a teenager going abroad.
Asked about the many volunteers backing out, he said with a laugh: "Maybe
some are just waiting to see if the rest of us survive. I'm kidding, kidding."
ALL INFORMATION, DATA, AND
MATERIAL CONTAINED, PRESENTED, OR PROVIDED HERE IS FOR GENERAL INFORMATION
PURPOSES ONLY AND IS NOT TO BE CONSTRUED AS REFLECTING THE KNOWLEDGE OR OPINIONS
OF THE PUBLISHER, AND IS NOT TO BE CONSTRUED OR INTENDED AS PROVIDING MEDICAL OR
LEGAL ADVICE. THE DECISION WHETHER OR NOT TO VACCINATE IS AN IMPORTANT AND
COMPLEX ISSUE AND SHOULD BE MADE BY YOU, AND YOU ALONE, IN CONSULTATION WITH
YOUR HEALTH CARE PROVIDER.
"A foolish faith in authority is the worst enemy of truth."
-- Albert Einstein, letter to a friend, 1901
"I know of no safe depository of the ultimate powers of the society but the people themselves, and if we think them not enlightened enough to exercise control with a wholesome discretion, the remedy is not to take it from them, but to inform their discretion by education."
-- Thomas Jefferson, letter to William C. Jarvis, September 28, 1820
"What's the point of vaccination if it doesn't protect you from the unvaccinated?"
-- Sandy Gottstein
"Who gets to decide what the greater good is and how many will be sacrificed to it?"