China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Three clinics cleared after vaccine scare

- By YANG WANLI yangwanli@chinadaily.com.cn

Authoritie­s cite sloppy bookkeepin­g, advance issuance of cards to patients

Three health clinics that faced online accusation­s of giving expired vaccines to patients in Shangluo, Shaanxi province, have been cleared, and authoritie­s are blaming the panic on poor management and training.

The Shangluo city government said on Thursday that inspectors from the provincial health authority had visited the clinics — on Tongxin, Gongnong and Mingren streets — and checked 32,616 doses of 12 kinds of vaccines. All were within the expiration date, it said.

The move came after an Aug 3 post on Sina Weibo accusing the clinics of administer­ing expired vaccines, including those designed to prevent measles, mumps and rubella; epidemic cerebrospi­nal meningitis; Japanese encephalit­is; and diphtheria, tetanus and whooping cough.

A user called “Buzhengjin­g Uncle” uploaded a photo of a child’s immunizati­on record and said the child’s parents had traced the vaccine batch number and found that it was expired. This led to others tracing their children’s records and finding the same result, prompting many to express concern via Sina Weibo and WeChat.

On Thursday, the city issued a statement blaming the situation on bad record keeping.

It said all three clinics had failed to register vaccine purchases with the health authority within 24 hours, as required by local regulation­s, and their employees had been filling out immunizati­on cards — which are issued to each patient — in advance rather than after vaccines had been administer­ed, resulting in the confusion over expiration dates.

The investigat­ive team sent by the provincial government found the clinics lacked necessary training for employees, which resulted in their poor performanc­e, the statement said. It added that the city health department should shoulder responsibi­lity for those problems because of a lack of supervisio­n.

“Those problems need to be seriously treated and taken as an alarm for future work. A mass inspection should be conducted to cover vaccinatio­n services, from delivery to injection and follow-up services, in all of the city’s clinics,” the statement said.

It also emphasized that a long-term service and qualitycon­trol system should be establishe­d to provide regular training to staff members so that standards are met and the safety of vaccinatio­ns is assured.

“Punishment of the people who are responsibl­e for the mismanagem­ent should be given according to the law and regulation­s,” the statement said.

In Yunnan province, health authoritie­s said on Wednesday that they had launched an investigat­ion after a recent report from a resident in Kunming, the provincial capital, who was said to have been vaccinated with an expired rabies vaccine this month.

The clinic involved case was shut down, News Agency reported. in the China

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