Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

COVID vaccine injury claims may face overwhelme­d bureaucrac­y

- Bernard Condon and Matt Sedensky

Lost in the U.S. launch of the coronaviru­s vaccine is a fact most don’t know: In rare cases of serious illness from the shots, the injured are blocked from suing and steered instead to an obscure federal bureaucrac­y with a record of seldom paying claims.

Housed in a nondescrip­t building in a Washington, D.C., suburb, the Countermea­sures Injury Compensati­on Program has just four employees and few hallmarks of an ordinary court. Decisions are made in secret by government officials, claimants can’t appeal to a judge and payments in most death cases are capped at $370,376.

George Washington University law professor Peter Meyers has followed the program for years and bluntly calls it a “black hole,” obtaining federal documents this summer showing it has paid fewer than 1 in 10 claims in its 15- year history.

Vaccines historical­ly provide broad protection with little risk but come with side effects just as any other drugs. Few unexpected adverse effects have been reported in the early days of Pfizer’s COVID-19 vaccine distributi­on in the U.S., though an Alaska health worker suffered a severe allergic reaction that included shortness of breath.

But experts are concerned that with the sheer volume of people expected to get coronaviru­s vaccines in the U.S. – more than 200 million – even a successful rollout with relatively few ill effects could be enough to swamp the program.

“It would need to be ramped up for sure,” said Dr. Vito Caserta, who oversaw the countermea­sures program from its creation until his retirement in 2014.

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