Current Affairs Czech Republic will not buy flu vaccine without license
The Czech health authorities on Thursday announced that after carefully assessing the risks presented by a possible swine flu epidemic, they would await the outcome of clinical tests before acquiring a flu vaccine for the country’s high risk groups. While many specialists approve, some are calling the decision irresponsible.
Dana Jurásková, photo: CTK
Although the number of people diagnosed with swine flu has now risen to 162
and the flu vaccine is actually being produced here in the Czech Republic
by the pharmaceutical company Baxter, the Czech health authorities have
refused the company’s purchase offer, saying that the risks presented do
not merit the use of a vaccine that has not been clinically tested. Health
Minister Dana Jurásková said the Czech Republic would not acquire a
vaccine without a license, even if it meant a delay of several months.
“It has been decided that the Czech Republic will wait for vaccine with a European registration, which provides a guarantee of safety and minimal side-effects.”
Michael Vít (in the center), photo: CTK
The minister’s decision was fully backed by the country’s Chief
Hygiene Officer Michael Vít, who pointed out that all the infected Czechs
had contracted a light form of the disease and no one had died of it. The
wait for a license, which countries in a more serious plight such as the US
and Great Britain have chosen to forego, will mean a delay of up to four
months in vaccinating the county’s high risk groups. Some specialists are
now questioning the wisdom of that decision, saying that with the start of
the school year and the onset of the regular flu season in the fall, the
country could face an epidemic long before it had acquired the vaccine.
While the Czech Association of Patients says it understands the decision to
wait for a license, it feels that production capacities should have been
reserved much earlier on. The head of the association Luboš Olejár
slammed the ministry for poor planning.
“I’d say that the ministry is acting in the usual Schweik-like manner,
much as the Czechs ran the EU presidency. They first assured us production
capacities had been reserved, now it seems they haven’t. Baxter’s not
taking any more orders for this year and even though the ministry has
promised to sign contracts with Novartis and GlaxoSmith Cline it is not
clear when the vaccines will available, or whether chronically ill patients
will get them in the first wave of vaccinations. We intend to put more
pressure on the ministry, to get some answers and let them know that
patients care.”
The ministry, for its part, has advised Czechs not to panic, since the
number of cases in the Czech Republic is still comparatively low.
Billboards have appeared in Prague instructing people to take basic
precautions and make sure they get a regular flu shot in the autumn, which
the authorities claim should mitigate the effects of a possible bout of the
swine flu. Asked what would happen in the event of a crisis, the
country’s chief hygiene officer said that measures would be taken “on
the go” as circumstances require.






