Philippine Daily Inquirer

The terrible consequenc­e

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Last June, in this space, the Inquirer joined its voice to the anxious chorus lamenting the Duterte administra­tion’s initial response to the Dengvaxia controvers­y. The focus of the editorial was on the opportunit­y to “reset” the official response, but it was necessary to note that the first response “had been so alarmist, and transparen­tly political, that it stoked fearful speculatio­n and even panic in the general population. One terrible, and entirely predictabl­e, consequenc­e was a kind of collateral damage; all other vaccines, even the uncontrove­rsial ones, suffered some guilt by associatio­n. Many parents and guardians decided to forgo other vaccinatio­ns for their children and wards.”

A new study just released, led by the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine and published in the Human Vaccines and Immunother­apeutics journal, quantifies that “terrible, and entirely predictabl­e, consequenc­e.”

A resurvey of 1,500 participan­ts who had taken part in a 2015 study showed a startling drop in “vaccine confidence.” In 2015, a resounding majority of 93 percent of the participan­ts classified themselves as “strongly agreeing” that vaccines were important; in the 2018 resurvey, months after the Dengvaxia controvers­y burst into the open, that proportion had fallen to 32 percent.

The lead author of the study, Prof. Heidi Larson, noted a possible explanatio­n: “The Sanofi announceme­nt was a spark that fuelled the flames of underlying political ferment in the Philippine­s. Health authoritie­s and immunizati­on programmes cannot solve political tensions, but trust issues and potential areas of anxiety and possible dissent must be considered in advance of a pandemic. This is especially important in an era of social media and the ability for misinforma­tion to be spread far and wide at the touch of a button.”

Recall that last January, a group of over 50 doctors had issued a stern warning over the government’s initial handling of the controvers­y. “The unnecessar­y fear and panic, largely brought about by the imprudent language and unsubstant­iated accusation­s by persons whose qualificat­ions to render any expert opinion on the matter are questionab­le, at best, have caused many parents to resist having their children avail of life-saving vaccines that our government gives.” They were referring to what the June editorial described as “the politicall­y motivated grandstand­ing of Sen. Richard Gordon and then Justice Secretary Vitaliano Aguirre, and the histrionic performanc­e of public-attorney-turned-instant-medical-expert Persida Acosta.”

Acosta continues to refuse to learn the obvious lesson. Asked for her reaction to the latest study, she denied any role in lowering the people’s confidence in all vaccines (not just Sanofi’s Dengvaxia), and then once again “fuelled the flames of underlying political ferment.”

“This is not politics. This is a crime,” she said—a lawyer’s narrowly legalistic way of understand­ing a public health issue. But she did not stop there; she went on to demonstrat­e that her interest in Dengvaxia was in fact political. She just made sure to drop the political burden at somebody else’s doorsteps.

“Sino po ba ang namulitika dito? Kailan po ba itinurok ito? Noong 2016, di ba, before election? O, 2016 election? Sino namulitika dito? (Who is politicizi­ng this? When was this injected? In 2016, right, before the election? So, 2016 election. Who is politicizi­ng this?)” The lack of self-awareness Acosta’s series of questions betrays is breathtaki­ng.

Contrast Acosta’s bleeding-heart, camera-ready performanc­e with the steady conduct and calming demeanor of Health Secretary Francisco Duque III—the man President Duterte appointed to replace his previous health secretary, who had expanded the scope of coverage of the Dengvaxia vaccinatio­n. His approach to the problem does justice to the facts as painstakin­gly gathered by the Department of Health: As of Sept. 14, the DOH determined that 19 out of 154 children who had died after receiving at least one dose of Dengvaxia had dengue. This is not only 19 lives too many, but 154 lives too young to be taken. But not even the 19 dengue-stricken patients could be conclusive­ly held to have died directly from Dengvaxia; medical specialist­s need to look at all the variables.

This approach does not lessen the significan­ce of the problem; rather, it seeks to find solutions, without creating new ones.

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