Friday, May 17, 2002; 4:12 PM WASHINGTON - The Pentagon wants to abandon its
policy of anthrax vaccinations for all troops and limit shots to those with the
highest risk, officials said Friday.
A planned announcement of the new policy two weeks ago was delayed because of
questions about how much vaccine American civilians might need in case of a
bioterrorist attack.
In attempting to rebuild a program hobbled for two years by a drug shortage
officials are considering such issues as intelligence assessments, dosing
requirements and other national security considerations, said Jim Turner,
Pentagon spokesman on health issues.The program was started in 1998 to vaccinate
all 2.4 million members of the active and reserve military but was radically
reduced after factory violations by the nation's sole anthrax vaccine
manufacturer left the Pentagon with a dwindling supply.In addition, there was
strong reluctance by some soldiers to take the shots.
The Food and Drug Administration cleared Lansing, Mich.-based BioPort's
manufacturing plant in January to produce the vaccine and release 500,000 doses
already made.After a three-month study on how to rebuild the program, Secretary
of Defense Donald H. Rumsfeld last month approved a plan to set aside the
original policy of vaccinating the whole force, according to officials who have
seen it.The plan now is to vaccinate only those at risk and not disclose who
they would be for security reasons, officials said. The thinking is that
would-be attackers would not know which troops are protected.
As for American civilians, health officials have said there's no need for
them to have the anthrax vaccine unless there is an attack.President Bush's
Homeland Security Office is trying to figure out how much vaccine might be
needed for police, firefighters, rescue squads and others who would be "first
responders" to any attack in America.The Pentagon postponed its planned
announcement on the military program after homeland security officials said
there wasn't enough known about the needs of this group, estimated at some 2
million, officials said.
The Pentagon shared vaccine with the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention last fall, when five people died and 13 were sickened by
anthrax-laced letters.Postal workers and Senate employees received protective
antibiotics in case they had been exposed to anthrax. After 60 days of that,
medical experts offered them choices of continuing antibiotics, adding
vaccinations or ending treatment.CDC requested vaccine and the Pentagon gave it
320,000 doses, Turner said.
Believing Iraq and other nations had produced anthrax weapons, former
Secretary of Defense William Cohen in 1997 ordered the immunization of the armed
forces.Shots started in 1998 for soldiers at the highest risk the Persian Gulf,
then Korea then moved beyond. As the drug shortage developed, the military
scaled back, eliminating troops on the way home from deployments, then those in
Korea and lastly those in the Gulf.For two years the vaccine has been reserved
for injections to troops on special missions and for researchers.Some military
personnel believe the vaccine causes health problems, and hundreds have been
forced from the armed forces after refusing orders to take it.
The government insists the vaccine is safe.Earlier this week, the
administration asked a federal judge in Washington to dismiss a lawsuit filed by
an Air Force captain and a former Air Force major challenging the mandatory
anthrax vaccines.
The new plan doesn't rule out the possibility that all forces might one day
be vaccinated.A small pilot program for State Department embassy workers also
was started but fizzled because of supplies.Since 1998, 2.1 million doses have
been given to 525,000 people.
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