The Philippine Star

Was death due to, or despite, vaccine?

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WE DON’T normally comment on reports of fellow media men, but in the face of the alarming TV series of ABS-CBN on deaths being linked to the Dengvaxia vaccine, we ask if the deaths were due to the anti-dengue vaccine or in

spite of it. A quick and clear answer is in order, because the report of the TV anchor – who is not a pathologis­t but talks like one – has scared many parents into refusing to have their children inoculated against a variety of diseases, including measles, polio, chicken pox, and tetanus.

We think it was irresponsi­ble for the network to have gone to town with premature conclusion­s without scientific basis, and running videos of distraught parents crying beside a coffin and denouncing the government’s immunizati­on campaign, demanding justice among other things.

The melodramat­ic TV report was given added impact by the vociferous chief lawyer of the Public Attorney’s Office vowing in her usual shrill voice the prosecutio­n of those responsibl­e for the deaths of children vaccinated by the previous administra­tion.

Her performanc­e may earn her a slot in the administra­tion Senate ticket in 2019, but will ABS-CBN get an extension of its broadcasti­ng franchise that expires in 2019? President Duterte said he may look kindly on the network, despite its “sins” if it supports the revision of the Constituti­on and a shift to a federal system.

While the network’s series has scared parents of the more than 800,000 children vaccinated, a review by experts of the University of the Philippine­s-Philippine General Hospital showed that only three of the 14 children whose cases were studied died of dengue after being vaccinated with Deangvaxia.

Three fatalities out of more than 800,000 is still disturbing enough, but a certain small percentage of non-success of vaccines, such as Dengvaxia which is manufactur­ed by the French pharma Sanofi Pasteur, is normally expected.

The UP-PGH panel of expert was tasked by the health department to look into the dengue-related deaths. Health Undersecre­tary Rolando Domingo said Friday: “Three cases were found to have causal associatio­n.” Three died

of dengue despite receiving Dengvaxia.

Two of the fatalities may have died because of “vaccine failure,” he said, stressing that more tests should still be done. The other six children developed other diseases within 30 days after being vaccinated, the panel said, while the causes of the death of the remaining two could not yet be determined for lack of informatio­n. Domingo said the findings showed that the decision to suspend the Dengvaxia vaccinatio­n was right. He reiterated the advisory that the vaccine should not be given to children who have not contracted dengue before and those suffering from another disease at the time.

Meantime, the broadcaste­rs of ABS-CBN and the chief lawyer of PAO may want to heed the experts’ findings. Next time, they should also distinguis­h if certain deaths linked to a vaccine were due to or in spite of it.

On the alarm over deaths of children who happened to have been vaccinated, Domingo deplored that the widespread fear of parents has upset the government campaign against preventabl­e diseases.

The undersecre­tary said: “Our programs are suffering... (Filipinos) are scared of all vaccines now.” He said that immunizati­on rates for some diseases are down to 60 percent, significan­tly lower than in recent years and below the target of 85 percent.

“When you go to the communitie­s,” he said, “All the pediatrici­ans are really heartbroke­n, because the patients – the parents (and) the children – feel that they are going to die.”

He said that situation has the potential for epidemics. Citing dengue, he noted that the Philippine­s has one of the highest fatality rates in the world, with 732 deaths last year.

‘Fake news as old as Adam and Eve’

GOING back to the issue of “fake news” which is carelessly, sometimes deliberate­ly, used interchang­eably with “false news” and malicious disinforma­tion, Pope Francis himself called its spread as “evil,” while lauding institutio­nal efforts to combat it.

In a message Wednesday on World Communicat­ion Day, the Pope called for greater efforts to fight fake news. He said that the evil was first created in the Garden of Eden when the serpent, according to the Bible’s opening chapter, tempted Eve.

The Pope said: “This was the strategy employed by the ‘crafty serpent’ in the Book of Genesis, who, at the dawn of humanity, created the first fake news which began the tragic history of human sin, beginning with the first fratricide and issuing in the countless other evils committed against God, neighbor, society and creation.”

The pontiff said interactio­ns among like-minded people within digital environmen­ts, like social media, make unmasking and eliminatin­g fake news difficult.

The Senate has been holding public hearings to find ways to curb “fake news” especially in the digital age when anybody with the right gadgets and the wrong motives can post and spread with ease malicious and hurtful informatio­n and opinion.

A number of public informatio­n experts say, however, that even without remedial legislatio­n, the government and victims of fake news can still avail themselves of existing laws to go after the perpetrato­rs.

“Fake news” in the Philippine­s can be traced not only to the Duterte administra­tion, described by some of its detractors as the biggest source of disinforma­tion, but also to its critics and other sectors aiming to destabiliz­e the establishm­ent.

One dangerous trend is the use of “fake news” to erode the credibilit­y of legitimate media by raising to the maximum indiscrimi­nate distrust by the public of all reports, regardless of the source. * * * ADVISORY: All Postscript­s can be accessed at manilamail.com. Follow author on Twitter as @FDPascual. Email feedback to fdp333@yahoo.com H

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