Ottawa Citizen

Parents panic over fake vaccinatio­ns

HEALTH CRISIS

- NINIEK KARMINI MARGIE MASON AND

• A scandal over fake vaccines given to children prompted angry and confused parents to physically attack a doctor in the Indonesian capital in a sign of deep-seated problems in the country’s health system.

Since last month, vials marked as vaccines but filled with saline solution and antibiotic­s have been discovered at 37 hospitals and clinics in nine cities, says the country’s Food and Drug Agency. So far, 23 people have been arrested, including three doctors.

The number of affected children is still being investigat­ed but could be significan­t in a country of more than 250 million people.

This week, Joko “Jokowi” Widodo, the Indonesian president, visited a clinic where nearly 170 children were to be revaccinat­ed.

He asked for patience while police continue to investigat­e an “extraordin­ary crime” of bogus vaccines allegedly going back as far as 2003.

“We are in crisis right now,” said Dr. Aman Bhakti Pulungan, head of Indonesia’s Pediatrici­an Associatio­n. “This is a medical emergency, and we have to overcome this.”

He said he is not aware of any children dying as a result of not being protected against diseases they were believed to have been vaccinated against, but added it’s possible some kids could have got sick without being detected.

The fake vaccines involved a number of shots routinely given to children, including those for measles, whooping cough, hepatitis and diphtheria.

The counterfei­ts were falsely labelled as imported brands, Pulungan said.

He believes the number of children affected is likely small, given that only one per cent of vaccines administer­ed nationwide are imported.

The government began revaccinat­ing children this week free of charge at affected hospitals and clinics, including 14 in the capital Jakarta and its outskirts.

Local television footage this week showed a mob of angry parents at Harapan Bunda Hospital in eastern Jakarta arguing with a doctor, then punching him and spitting on him before security officers broke up the brawl.

Other parents took their rage to the government, complainin­g to members of parliament and demanding help.

Jane Soepardi, director of surveillan­ce, health quarantine and epidemiolo­gy at the Health Ministry, said Friday the government estimates 5,000 children from 4.8 million targeted this year for immunizati­on, received the fake vaccines.

“Fake vaccines arose because there was a scarcity of vaccine a few years ago that led hospitals and clinics to look for imported vaccines,” she said. “Also because the middle class demanded imported vaccines rather than locally made.”

Soepardi said the fakes did not contain harmful substances, but it’s possible the unsafe process of producing them could cause infections in children to whom they were administer­ed.

Health Minister Nila Moeloek has called for calm and warned parents not to panic, but distrust of the health system runs deep in a country rife with corruption, overcrowde­d hospitals and a lack of qualified doctors. For those who can afford it, Singapore or Malaysia are often the first choice for treatment.

Danang Susilo, the father of 14-month-old Chelea, said he is worried about his daughter’s health even though doctors from Karya Medika Hospital at Bekasi on the outskirts of Jakarta assured him the fake vaccine she received was harmless.

“I was shocked and very disappoint­ed when the hospital management asked me, along with about 300 other parents, to bring our children for revaccinat­ion because the vaccine that is injected into our children turned out to be fake,” he said. “How could this happen?”

In 2013, the Food and Drug Agency received a report from British pharmaceut­ical company GlaxoSmith­Kline about the circulatio­n of counterfei­t vaccines bearing its name. The perpetrato­r was caught and fined less than $100.

Additional problems were discovered in 2014 and 2015. This year, PT Sanofi-Aventis Indonesia, a subsidiary of French pharmaceut­ical company Sanofi, notified the national police about fake vaccines using its product labels, according to the agency.

Dr. Kartono Mohammad, former head of the Indonesia Medical Associatio­n, said regulation­s are in place to ensure that safe vaccines are administer­ed, but enforcemen­t and monitoring are weak. He said the vaccine scandal is a symptom of a much larger problem and the country’s entire health system should be overhauled.

“The attitude of the Indonesian people, especially the middle class, is that they look at the building and the facility and they say: This is the best hospital,” he said.

“But nobody knows if it really is a good hospital or not because there is no quality control, no quality assurance done by the government.”

 ?? ACHMAD IBRAHIM / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Parents bring their children to a hospital for vaccinatio­ns in Indonesia. A scandal has erupted after vials marked as vaccines but filled with saline solution and antibiotic­s were discovered at 37 hospitals and clinics, exposing problems with the...
ACHMAD IBRAHIM / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Parents bring their children to a hospital for vaccinatio­ns in Indonesia. A scandal has erupted after vials marked as vaccines but filled with saline solution and antibiotic­s were discovered at 37 hospitals and clinics, exposing problems with the...

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