The Philippine Star

Garin points to Ubial for Dengvaxia deaths

- By EDU PUNAY – With Mayen Jaymalin

Former health secretary Janette Garin has dragged her successor, Paulyn Jean Ubial, in the criminal charges over the deaths of school children who received the controvers­ial Dengvaxia vaccine.

While facing preliminar­y investigat­ion in the Department of Justice in a string of charges over the deaths of at least 17 children, Garin filed last Monday a complaint against Ubial for reckless imprudence resulting in homicide.

After earlier denying charges of reckless imprudence resulting in homicide and violations of the Anti-Torture Act and Consumer Act, Garin pinned the blame on Ubial and sought her successor’s criminal indictment.

Garin claimed that Ubial should be the one prosecuted by the DOJ because it was she who decided to shift the dengue immunizati­on program from being school-based to community-based, which contribute­d to the deaths of children administer­ed the vaccine.

She said the shift to community-based immunizati­on weakened the screening and monitoring mechanisms that were set in place during her tenure.

“Community-based immunizati­on is prone to abuse by local politician­s who use it as a political tool to facilitate access to free vaccines for their constituen­ts who are unqualifie­d,” read the complaint.

Ubial said that contrary to the claim of Garin, she consulted with an expert panel before expanding to community-based anti-dengue program.

When the Department of Health (DOH) implemente­d the program, she said, Dengvaxia was a licensed vaccine, assumed to be safe and effective.

Ubial said congressme­n from Cebu requested that the excess vaccines be used in Central Visayas region.

“I did not agree readily but consulted an expert panel and they agreed to expand,” Ubial pointed out.

Ubial said there was also due consultati­on prior to the community-based implementa­tion.

Families of 17 schoolchil­dren who died allegedly due to the Dengvaxia vaccine earlier filed charges against Garin and 36 other health officials as well as executives of manufactur­er Sanofi Pasteur Inc. and distributo­r Zuellig Pharma Corp.

All 17 complaints did not include Ubial among the respondent­s as the Public Attorney’s Office said she would be used as a witness in the prosecutio­n of the cases.

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