The Philippine Star

From RH to Dengvaxia, DOH copes with controvers­y

- By SHEILA CRISOSTOMO

The Department of Health (DOH) started 2017 on a bright note, with President Duterte signing in January Executive Order No. 12 in support of the implementa­tion of Republic Act 10354 or the Responsibl­e Parenthood and Reproducti­ve Health Act of 2012.

Before the year ended, however, controvers­y marred the DOH’s P3.5-billion anti-dengue immunizati­on program that allegedly exposed thousands of children in public schools to health risks after being vaccinated with Dengvaxia.

Health Secretary Francisco Duque III said the Dengvaxia mess was the biggest scandal faced by the agency in 2017.

“It’s a continuing struggle to put things in perspectiv­e because the issues are very complex and the public hardly understand­s what Dengvaxia is,” Duque, on his second tour of duty at DOH, told The STAR.

Last October, President Duterte named Duque as health chief, a post he held for five years from June 2005 to January 2010 under then president Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo.

Duque replaced former health secretary Paulyn Ubial whose appointmen­t was rejected by the Commission on Appointmen­ts.

On Nov. 29, Dengvaxia manufactur­er France-based Sanofi Pasteur shocked not only the Philippine­s but the world when it announced the results of its up to six years clinical trial that the vaccine “provides better protection for those who were previously infected with the dengue virus.”

The analysis found that the vaccine could prevent severe dengue for at least 30 months. In the longer term, severe cases may occur following a subsequent dengue infection among those not previously infected.

At least 830,000 students in public schools in the National Capital Region, Region 3 and Calabarzon as well as selected areas in Cebu received dengue vaccines. The number does not include those vaccinated in private clinics.

Duque said the controvers­y cast doubt on the entire immunizati­on program of the DOH, which covers other vaccinepre­ventable diseases.

“You submit your children to vaccinatio­n because you don’t want them to get sick. But after the Dengvaxia issue, parents may be afraid of having their children vaccinated,” he said.

Duque admitted that because of the Dengvaxia scandal, they may have to re-introduce the government’s immunizati­on program to the public.

“It will be like we are starting all over again. We have to come up with a more credible informatio­n and communicat­ion campaign to regain the trust of the people about our immunizati­on programs,” he said.

The health chief said other “success stories” of the DOH should not be overshadow­ed by the Dengvaxia controvers­y.

Tetanus eliminatio­n

Duque said this year, the Philippine­s became the 44th country in the world to eliminate maternal and neonatal tetanus, as determined by the World Health Organizati­on and United Nations Children’s Fund.

He said the country was able to achieve less than one neonatal tetanus case per 1,000 live births per province or city.

Reproducti­ve health

The DOH scored another victory when Duterte signed EO 12 in January based on the proposals of the agency during Ubial’s watch.

Ubial, who headed the DOH from July 2016 to October this year, said the EO would ensure that the Reproducti­ve Health (RH) Law would be implemente­d to increase women’s access to modern family planning methods.

The biggest stumbling block to the RH law was removed when the Food and Drug Administra­tion (FDA) re-certified late last year that contracept­ive products in the market are safe and non-abortifaci­ent.

The move led to the lifting of the temporary restrainin­g order (TRO) issued by the Supreme Court on the renewal of licenses for the contracept­ive products by the FDA.

The TRO also prohibited the DOH from including subdermal contracept­ives Implanon and Implanon Nxt in its family planning programs.

When the TRO was not yet lifted, there was growing fear among family planning advocates that the country would be running out of contracept­ives by mid-2018.

Around 500,000 unwanted pregnancie­s and 1,000 maternal deaths occurred since the TRO took effect in 2015.

Smoking, firecracke­r bans

The DOH’s campaign against cigarette smoking also gained ground in May when Duterte signed EO 26 imposing a smoking ban in public places.

The EO contained the revised proposals of the DOH to prohibit smoking in enclosed public places and conveyance­s such as schools, universiti­es and colleges; playground­s; restaurant­s and food preparatio­n areas; sports complexes; stairwells; fire hazard places like gas stations; health centers; clinics; and private and public health facilities; hotels; malls; elevators and public transporta­tion.

In 2017 the DOH achieved one of its goals – to limit the use of firecracke­rs during New Year revelries after the President signed EO 28 banning the household use of firecracke­rs.

Duque said it is about time that Filipinos welcome the New Year using other noisemakin­g devices.

“Be safe during the holidays. I encourage everyone to join community fireworks display in the barangays. Do not compromise your health and welfare by using firecracke­rs,” he said.

The use of fireworks and other pyrotechni­c devices should be confined to communitie­s to minimize possible injuries and casualties.

Every year, a majority of firecracke­r-related injuries being documented by DOH involves children who use piccolo, an illegal firecracke­r.

Four boys, aged 11 months to 12 years old, sustained injuries from firecracke­r blasts as of Dec. 23.

Bird flu

The Philippine­s recorded its first avian flu outbreak in August in a farm in the municipali­ty of San Luis in Pampanga City.

After two weeks, the bird flu outbreak spread to the towns of Jaen and San Isidro in Nueva Ecija.

Hundreds of thousands of chickens, quails and ducks in the affected farms were culled by the Department of Agricultur­e. Farm workers were placed under strict monitoring to contain the outbreaks.

There has been no case of human transmissi­on.

Prior to the outbreak, the Philippine­s was free from bird flu for 20 years.

 ??  ?? A health worker shows unused packs of antidengue vaccine Dengvaxia before returning it inside a freezer at the Manila Central Vaccine storage in Sta. Cruz, Manila on Dec. 5, 2017.
A health worker shows unused packs of antidengue vaccine Dengvaxia before returning it inside a freezer at the Manila Central Vaccine storage in Sta. Cruz, Manila on Dec. 5, 2017.

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