Philippine Daily Inquirer

GET KIDS JABBED VS HEPA B, LAWMAKER URGES PARENTS

- By Jeannette I. Andrade @jiandradeI­NQ

House Deputy Majority Leader Janette Garin on Thursday urged parents to have their kids vaccinated against hepatitis B to protect them from liver cancer and possibly an outbreak by 2042.

The Iloilo representa­tive and former health secretary stressed the need for children to get three doses of the vaccine, saying approximat­ely 30 percent of unvaccinat­ed people who contract hepatitis B may end up developing hepatocell­ular carcinoma, a deadly type of liver cancer.

Garin noted the decline in the government’s promotion of its vaccinatio­n programs, including for hepatitis B, following allegation­s of child deaths resulting from jabs.

“What’s the consequenc­e? The effect for unvaccinat­ed children who contract hepatitis B is, possibly by 2042 or 2045, many would have liver cancer or hepatocell­ular carcinoma in the Philippine­s,” she said.

The lawmaker cited the 2024 Global Hepatitis Report of the World Health Organizati­on (WHO) which listed the Philippine­s among the countries contributi­ng two-thirds of the global illness burden from hepatitis B and C. The others were Bangladesh, China, Ethiopia, India, Indonesia, Nigeria and Pakistan.

Deaths up

The report, based on data from 187 countries, showed that the estimated number of deaths from viral hepatitis increased from 1.1 million in 2019 to 1.3 million in 2022, with 254 million people living with hepatitis B and C worldwide.

According to the WHO, 83 percent of the deaths were caused by hepatitis B, with 3,500 people around the world dying daily from hepatitis B and C infections.

The Department of Health categorize­s liver cancer as the third most prevalent type of cancer among Filipinos.

Garin further noted that the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has classified hepatitis B as a serious disease caused by a virus that attacks the liver.

She pointed out that the CDC recommends the hepatitis B vaccine for infants, children or adolescent­s younger than 19 years of age who have not been vaccinated.

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