The Philippine Star

DOH eyes mandatory vaccinatio­n for children

- By SHEILA CRISOSTOMO – With Helen Flores, Janvic Mateo, Paolo Romero, Christina Mendez

With the measles outbreak raging in the country, the Department of Health (DOH) is looking at the possibilit­y of making vaccinatio­n mandatory for all children.

According to Health Secretary Francisco Duque III, some policy interventi­ons may be needed to ensure the protection of children against vaccine-preventabl­e illnesses.

He said there is an existing executive order issued by former president and now Speaker Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo in 2007 that requires the immunizati­on of children before they enter elementary and pre-school.

The policy, however, does not provide for sanctions for failing to comply.

“We are looking at countries where immunizati­on is mandatory. We have no law yet (on this) but this is something that merits serious considerat­ion,” he added.

Duque said they are considerin­g legislatio­n that “will mandate, even if selectivel­y, vaccinatio­n against measles which happens to be the most contagious, for instance.”

He, however, admitted that there is a “myriad of reasons – whether religious or customary” –that need to be considered in making vaccinatio­n a requiremen­t.

“There are really these idiosyncra­sies that contribute to non-immunizati­on, non-vaccinatio­n of certain groups of individual­s,” the official added.

This week, the DOH had declared an outbreak of measles in the National Capital Region (NCR), Central Luzon, Calabarzon and Central and Western Visayas because of soaring cases of the disease.

The DOH confirmed a measles outbreak after the number rose by 550 percent or 196 cases of measles in Metro Manila from Jan. 1 to Feb. 6 this year compared to 20 cases recorded in the same period last year.

There were 55 deaths from measles at the San Lazaro Hospital in Manila, most of them children from three months to four years old. There are still 248 children being treated for the disease at San Lazaro Hospital.

Dengvaxia scare

The DOH has said low vaccinatio­n coverage in these regions was a result of the Dengvaxia fiasco.

“We’re very frustrated indeed. We were warning that this was going to happen. That the collateral damage to the DOH immunizati­on program was going to be apparent, and this is what we see now,” Duque said.

In NCR, the vaccinatio­n coverage for measles was around 39-41 percent, a far cry from the 90 percent target to develop herd immunity where even the unvaccinat­ed are protected.

“Somehow, the Dengvaxia scare, all these drama that they were doing, have really caused damage to the integrity and effectiven­ess of DOH to conduct and ensure that there will be adequate immunizati­on coverage so that they will be protected from vaccine-preventabl­e diseases,” he added.

Health Undersecre­tary Eric Domingo said the relatively low number of measles vaccinatio­ns in the country could be attributed to the aborted Dengvaxia vaccinatio­n program that began in 2016.

In 2017, French pharmaceut­ical company Sanofi Pasteur published clinical trial data showing that Dengvaxia could have unintended consequenc­es in patients who had never been infected with the mosquito-borne virus.

Public Attorney’s Office chief Persida Acosta is just doing her job in protecting the victims of Dengvaxia vaccine, Cabinet Secretary Karlo Alexei Nograles said yesterday, after the top public lawyer was blamed for the vaccinatio­n scare in the country.

At a press briefing, Nograles said Acosta should not be blamed for the vaccine scare that caused the outbreak of measles among many children and left about two-million infants at risk for lack of measles vaccine.

“But as far as the PAO is concerned, I would agree with the statements of Secretary (Salvador) Panelo, that obviously the PAO chief is doing her job as far as representi­ng the victims of Dengvaxia is concerned, and I don’t think it has anything to do with torpedoing the DOH immunizati­on program,” Nograles added.

“It’s just that perhaps because of her personalit­y – chief PAO Acosta is just very vocal about her passion for protecting the Dengvaxia victims,” he said.

President Duterte has ordered the DOH to step up the vaccinatio­n campaign nationwide.

“As far as the Department of Health is concerned, they made a presentati­on at the Cabinet meeting and the President agreed that the DOH must pursue more aggressive action on addressing this outbreak,” he said.

In line with this, the President also tapped the Presidenti­al Communicat­ions Operations Office led by Secretary Martin Andanar to “help in informatio­n disseminat­ion and communicat­ing to the people the importance of vaccinatio­n.”

Nograles said the President saw the urgency to have a national campaign on the vaccinatio­n program of the government, putting aside insiuation­s that the DOH was remiss in its job.

Vice President Leni Robredo and Save the Children Philippine­s appealed to parents to have their kids immunized.

“To all the parents who are listening now, I appeal to you to pay attention to your children’s health and have them vaccinated against measles,” Robredo said in a video message posted on YouTube last Thursday night.

Robredo said more than two million children remain unvaccinat­ed.

The Vice President has assured parents that the government’s vaccines available for measles and other infectious diseases are safe for use.

Lawyer Albert Muyot, chief executive officer of Save the Children Philippine­s, said yesterday children need not die of preventabl­e diseases such as measles.

He called on community health workers to intensify informatio­n drive to reach out to parents and guardians.

Muyot said the First 1,000 Days law enacted in November last year mandates national agencies, including the DOH and local government units, to ensure children’s proper health and nutrition, including complete immunizati­on.

“The law is already in place to make sure children are given a healthy start in life through interventi­ons such as complete immunizati­on, including measles vaccine,” Muyot said.

Amado Parawan, health and nutrition advisor of Save the Children Philippine­s, said complete immunizati­on is highly critical to a child’s survival in the first 1,000 days of his life, which is up to two years old.

“Failure to complete immunizati­on could cause a child’s death before reaching two years old, which is happening now to children with measles,” he said.

Robredo said it is not the time to politicize and bicker over the matter as millions of children are at risk.

“To all the parents who are listening, we are urging them to immediatel­y prioritize the vaccinatio­n of their children and the rest of their families against measles. The lives and safety of our loved ones are on the line,” she said in Filipino.

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