Sun.Star Cagayan de Oro

PH gov’t probing 14 deaths

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THE Philippine­s is investigat­ing if the deaths of 14 children had any link to a dengue vaccine whose use the government has suspended due to health concerns, officials said Friday.

The country stopped the sale and distributi­on of Dengvaxia last month after Sanofi, the French manufactur­er, warned it could worsen symptoms for people who had not previously been infected with the virus.

Sanofi has maintained the vaccine does not kill people but did not comment on the health department’s new announceme­nt.

The government has assigned an independen­t panel of experts to review the cases and expects their findings in one or two weeks, Health Secretary Francisco Duque said.

“We asked them the question, number one: what they think is the cause of death, and then second, do they think it is related to the vaccinatio­n,” Assistant Health Secretary Enrique Domingo told reporters.

More than 800,000 schoolchil­dren received the vaccine last year in the world’s first public dengue immunizati­on program.

Dengue was blamed for only 4 of the 14 deaths being probed, Duque said, with lupus and meningococ­cemia named as the cause of the others.

But now the panel of experts will verify those reports, the officials said.

“We need to watch out for 837,000 students who have been vaccinated and to us this is paramount,” Duque added.

He also said the government wants to return unused Dengvaxia stock worth P1.5 billion to Sanofi and get a refund.

In November last year, Sanofi released findings of a new study that said showed Dengvaxia could lead to severe infections for vaccinated people who caught dengue for the first time.

The company also urged the Philippine government not to suspend the vaccine’s use, saying it was a crucial tool in fighting the deadly disease.

However, the disclosure triggered a public furor, with some parents blaming the vaccine for their children’s deaths and with a number of legislator­s accusing the health department of endangerin­g public health.

In a move unrelated to the Friday announceme­nt, the department this week suspended a government clearance for Dengvaxia for one year and fined Sanofi P100,000.

It ruled that Sanofi did not comply with Food and Drug Administra­tion (FDA) regulation­s, a finding that the company disputed Friday.

The pharmaceut­ical giant said in a statement that it had complied with local regulation­s and FDA requiremen­ts.

“Sanofi Pasteur will continue to cooperate in full transparen­cy with the Philippine­s FDA and is committed to comply with the Philippine­s laws and regulation­s,” the company added.

Dengue, a mosquitobo­rne illness, is a leading cause of serious illness and death among children in

some Asian and Latin American countries, according to the World Health Organizati­on.

More than a thousand people died of dengue last year in the Philippine­s, the health department said. AFP

 ??  ?? A national immunizati­on program manager shows dengue vaccine Dengvaxia in Sta. Cruz, Manila, December 4, 2017. RR/Reuters
A national immunizati­on program manager shows dengue vaccine Dengvaxia in Sta. Cruz, Manila, December 4, 2017. RR/Reuters

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