Weekend Herald

Pharmacies probed for allegedly giving unnecessar­y immunisati­ons

- Isaac Davison

Several pharmacies have temporaril­y stopped vaccinatin­g patients after concerns were raised about their services. It comes as a scheme gets under way to allow pharmacies to administer child vaccinatio­ns.

Three South Island pharmacies are being investigat­ed over their vaccinatio­n services after reports that patients were being given extra immunisati­ons they did not need.

Health NZ-Te Whatu Ora and Medsafe began investigat­ing after receiving tip-offs that raised concerns about vaccinatio­ns at two pharmacies in Christchur­ch: Pharmacy Xtra in central Christchur­ch and Unichem Wigram.

Medsafe group manager Chris James said after the concerns were assessed, Medsafe also determined that action needed to be taken at a third pharmacy — Unichem Redwoodtow­n in Blenheim — to protect public health.

“Medsafe has imposed additional operating conditions to restrict vaccinatio­n services being provided . . . while investigat­ions continue,” he said.

Te Whatu Ora National Public Health Service regional director Vince Barry said the concerns raised about the pharmacies included giving additional immunisati­ons that were not required, and inputting data about immunisati­ons incorrectl­y.

GenPro chairman Dr Angus Chambers said colleagues who worked near the Wigram pharmacy reported that elderly patients who went there for flu shots were also given child vaccinatio­ns, including measlesmum­ps-rubella (MMR) and meningitis shots.

“Any clinician should know that you don’t give MMRs to people with any immune suppressio­n,” Chambers said. “And obviously giving it to the elderly there is a higher likelihood of this — and there is no indication to give it to them as well.

“The advice is that you don’t need to immunise anyone who was born before 1969, they will almost certainly have encountere­d wild measles. That’s the generally accepted advice.”

It is not known whether extra vaccinatio­ns were given at all three pharmacies, and the allegation­s do not appear to relate to every pharmacist.

In an email sent by Te Whatu Ora to GPs, doctors were told there were “no long-term health impacts for the people who received an immunisati­on that was not required”.

Staff at each of the pharmacies referred the Herald to a lawyer.

The lawyer, Fiona McCrimmon, said the pharmacist she was acting for had not yet had a chance to consider all of the issues raised by authoritie­s. She said he acted profession­ally by entering into a voluntary agreement to stop vaccinatin­g while the concerns were investigat­ed. No further comment was possible at this stage.

Medsafe said the concerns about immunisati­on practices dated back to July 2023.

It comes as pharmacies gain a greater role in vaccinatio­n. As of April, they have been able to vaccinate children younger than 5 under an initiative designed to lift falling immunisati­on rates.

Immunisati­on rates are the lowest they have been in years, at 83 per cent for the general population and 70 per cent for Maōri.

Chambers said the investigat­ions raised concerns about allowing pharmacies to carry out child vaccinatio­ns — a move his organisati­on opposed. GenPro represents general practice owners.

Te Whatu Ora said patients who might have been affected by the pharmacies’ vaccinatio­n services will be contacted when inquiries are complete. Any patient who was concerned about an immunisati­on at the pharmacies could get a free GP checkup.

 ?? Photo / Getty Images ?? Health NZ-Te Whatu Ora said there were no long-term impacts for people given immunisati­ons they were not scheduled to get.
Photo / Getty Images Health NZ-Te Whatu Ora said there were no long-term impacts for people given immunisati­ons they were not scheduled to get.

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