Manila Bulletin

Garin, 29 others charged over ‘Dengvaxia death’

- By JEFFREY G. DAMICOG

The Public Attorney’s Office (PAO) yesterday filed a P3.3-million civil suit against former Health Secretary Janette Garin and 29 others, including seven past and present Department of Health (DOH) officials, over the death of a child who was administer­ed with the anti-dengue vaccine, Dengvaxia, in Quezon City last September.

PAO Chief Persida Acosta filed the civil complaint before the Quezon City Regional Trial Court (RTC) on behalf of Ramil Pestillos and his wife Liza, the parents of the dead child Anjielica Pestillos.

“In the case of Anjielica M. Pestillos, a healthy ten-year-old girl who had no history of any serious illness including dengue, she paid the ultimate price,” read the complaint.

The complaint cited that Anjielica, a Grade 4 student at the Holy Spirit Elementary School in Quezon City, received for free the vaccinatio­n at her school on Sept. 13, 2017.

However, Anjielica died on Dec. 5, 2017 at the East Avenue Medical Center, where she had been confined since Nov. 15, 2017.

Apart from Garin, Department of Health (DOH) officials named in the suit are Undersecre­tary Gerardo Bayugo, Assistant Secretary Lyndon Lee Suy, Director Joyce Ducusin, Division Chief Rosalinda Vianzon, Director IV Mario Baquilod as well as former undersecre­taries Vicente Belizardo and Kenneth Hartigan-Go.

The PAO also included in the suit are executives and officials of Dengvaxia manufactur­er Sanofi Pasteur, namely, chairman and president Carlito Realuyo; chief financial officer Stanislas Camart; directors Jean Louis Grunwald and Conchita Santos; corporate secretary Jazel Anne Calvo; and assistant corporate secretarie­s Pearl Grae Cabali and Maria Ester de Anton.

Also facing the civil suit are officers of the broker of the vaccine, Zuellig Pharma Corporatio­n –president and chief executive officer Raymund Azurin; vice president and treasurer Nilo Badiola; chairman Kasigod Jamias; chief operating officer Marc Franck; vice presidents Ashley Gerard Antonio, Rosa Maria Chua, Danilo Cahoy, Manuel Concio III, and Roland Cinco; assistant vice presidents Ana Liza Peralta and Ma. Visitacion Barriero; and directors Michael Becker, Ricardo Romulo, Imran Babar Chughtai, and John Stokes Davison.

“It is hurting and emotionall­y disturbing enough for one’s child to die, but the death to have been made possible by government officials tasked to protect the citizenry’s health and interest, and caused by a drug ironically believed to protect children from the lethal threat posed by the dengue virus, is truly damaging and dishearten­ing,” the charge sheet said.

In the suit, the PAO asked the court that “the defendants jointly and severally liable to pay the plaintiffs the amount of Three Million Three Hundred Eighteen Thousand and Eighty Pesos (13,318,080.00) as actual and compensato­ry damages.”

Apart from this, the PAO also sought that the defendants “jointly and severally” pay 150,000 as civil indemnity for the death of Anjielica, 1400,000 as moral damages, and 1400,000 as exemplary damages.

Administra­tive case Meanwhile, the Volunteers Against Crime and Corruption (VACC) and the Vanguard of the Philippine Constituti­on, Inc., (VPCI) also filed yesterday a joint administra­tive complaint against six officials of the DOH before the Office of the President over the Dengvaxia mess.

Roque welcomed the joint administra­tive complaint against DOH undersecre­taries Carol Tanio, Gerardo Bayugo, Lilibeth David, and Mario Villaverde; and assistant secretarie­s Lyndon Lee Suy, and Nestor Santiago.

Also included in the complaint are Financial and Management Service (FMS) Director Laureano Cruz; OIC Directors Joyce Ducusin, and Mar Wynn Bello; Director IV Leonila Gorgolon, Rio Magpantay, and Ariel Valencia; and Director Julius Lecciones.

“Very good, because I’d like to know the reasons, too,” Roque said during the Palace briefing.

The VACC and the VPCI are also calling for the dismissal from service of the respondent­s for grave misconduct and gross negligence for “ill-advisedly, thoughtles­sly, and imprudentl­y implementi­ng” the school-based dengue vaccinatio­n program.

They claimed the procuremen­t of the vaccine was fast-tracked and may have transgress­ed pertinent provisions of the Government Procuremen­t Reform Act.

The complainan­ts said the respondent­s’ supposed “utter disregard” of medical protocols and substantiv­e law, regardless of the number of deaths resulting from the vaccine, makes them accountabl­e.

Autopsies continue

Malacañang rejected the appeal of former Health Secretary Esperanza Cabral to stop the autopsy conducted on the bodies of children who allegedly died after getting Dengvaxia shots.

Cabral and the Doctors for Public Welfare (DPW) made a similar call on the Department of Justice (DOJ) to order the PAO to stop the autopsy on children and leave the matter of determinin­g the cause of death to competent experts.

“The PAO must show that they did perform the right process of examinatio­n on the exhumed bodies of the deceased kids,” said Dr. Francisco Tranquilin­o of the DPW.

But Roque said government will exercise all options until the truth is reached. “We will proceed with the autopsies because the UP-PGH (University of the Philippine­s-Philippine General Hospital) study itself said that autopsy may have to be conducted on the three,” said.

Roque was referring to the PGH-Dengue Investigat­ive Task Force (DITF) report which revealed that three of the 14 child victims died of dengue. Two of the three child deaths “may have been on account of vaccine failure,” the report added.

Justice Secretary Vitaliano Aguirre II said he will not stop the PAO from conducting autopsies.

Since the PGH-DITF has been tasked by the DOH to conduct the autopsies, the DPW urged the DOJ to just leave the matter of determinin­g the cause of death to “competent forensic pathologis­ts.”

But Roque countered the group, saying: “You are not barred from introducin­g pathologic­al results from other sources. But courts very seldom rely on findings not made by government medico-legal officers,” Roque said.

“We’re not telling anyone to stop what they are doing. We are just saying that we are flatly rejecting the call of the physicians to put an end to the exhumation because the position of the government is we’re in search of the truth; we will resort to autopsy when it is needed,” he continued.

Garin ‘mobbed’

At the end of yesterday’s joint probe into the Dengvaxia mess by the House Committees on Good Government and Public Accountabi­lity and on Health, Garin witnessed on Monday the wrath of angry mothers whose children are believed to have been adversely affected by the vaccine.

Garin had just stepped out of the Belmonte Hall of the Batasan Complex’s South Wing Annex at past 5 p.m., when four wailing women rushed at her.

The ex-Cabinet official had just participat­ed in the day-long congressio­nal investigat­ion on the 13.5-billion antidengue inoculatio­n program of the previous Aquino administra­tion using Sanofi S.A.’s Dengvaxia vaccine when she was nearly attacked.

During the emotionall­y-charged confrontat­ion, the women shouted, “You killed our children!” and “We want medical interventi­on!” as they tried to grab and claw at Garin as rushed into an elevator behind several male companions.

However, the protesting women would later admit to reporters who covered the hearing that none of their children died as a result of Dengvaxia. Still, they insisted seeing their neighbors’ kids falling ill due to the vaccine.

Reports said that the mothers were taken to the Batasan Complex by Gabriela Party-List Rep. Arlene Brosas, a member of the militant Makabayan bloc. (With reports from Argyll Cyrus B. Geducos, Ellson A. Quismorio, and Hannah Torregoza)

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