| Literature DB >> 24218071 |
Kate L Mandeville1, Sam O'Neill, Andrew Brighouse, Alice Walker, Kielan Yarrow, Kenneth Chan.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Concerns have been raised over competing interests (CoI) among academics during the 2009 to 2010 A/H1N1 pandemic. Media reporting can influence public anxiety and demand for pharmaceutical products. We assessed CoI of academics providing media commentary during the early stages of the pandemic.Entities:
Keywords: EPIDEMICS; ETHICS; INFLUENZA; PUBLIC HEALTH POLICY
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24218071 PMCID: PMC3932964 DOI: 10.1136/jech-2013-203128
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Epidemiol Community Health ISSN: 0143-005X Impact factor: 3.710
Figure 1Flow of articles through study.
Key events, official risk assessments and UK policy decisions during study period
| Date (2009) | Event/policy decision |
|---|---|
| Week of 20 April | First human cases of H1N1 confirmed in Mexico, the USA and Canada. |
| 24 April | HPA press release: “The mild illness reported to date and the limited evidence of sustained human-to-human transmission suggest that the immediate level of threat to public health is very limited”. |
| 26 April | UK government agrees to containment measures as part of its emergency response, including treatment of suspected cases and their close contacts with neuraminidase inhibitors without waiting for diagnostic confirmation. |
| 27 April | Confirmation of first UK cases. Minister of Health issues statement: “The range of symptoms in the people affected is similar to those of regular human seasonal influenza. It is important to note that, apart from in Mexico, all those infected with the virus have experienced mild symptoms and made a full recovery”. |
| 29 April | WHO states, “It is possible that the full clinical spectrum of this disease goes from mild illness to severe disease. We need to continue to monitor the evolution of the situation...”. UK government decides to increase the national stockpile of neuraminidase inhibitors from 33.5 million to 50 million doses. |
| 1 May | HPA confirms human-to-human transmission in UK, stating: “At this stage, we still only have two cases of human to human transmission in the UK. This does not yet represent sustained human to human transmission. The risk to the general public is still very low”. |
| 11 May | UK government takes decision to purchase sufficient H1N1-specific vaccine for 45% of the population. |
| 11 June | WHO confirms start of a global pandemic, stating “we have good reason to believe that this pandemic, at least in its early days, will be of moderate severity. Worldwide, the number of deaths is small. [..]..we do not expect to see a sudden and dramatic jump in the number of severe or fatal infections”. |
| 15 June | DH statement: “The localised cases of swine flu found in the UK have so far been generally mild in most people, but are proving to be severe in a small minority of cases”. |
| 17 June | WHO welcomes donation by Sanofi-Aventis of 100 million doses of H1N1 vaccine for low-income countries. |
| 26 June | GlaxoSmithKline and Baxter Healthcare contracted to provide a total of 132 million doses of H1N1-specific vaccine, sufficient for two doses for the whole UK population. |
| 2 July | UK government changes to ‘treatment’ phase in its emergency response, where prophylaxis with neuraminidase inhibitors would be provided to those in high-risk groups only. HPA press release states: “Once the virus is widespread within the community, the value of antivirals in terms of slowing the spread of the disease or offering individual protection is greatly reduced”. |
DH, Department of Health (England); HPA, Health Protection Agency.
Examples of risk assessments made by academics and official agencies, by category assigned to academic risk assessment
| Official risk assessment | Academic risk assessment | |
|---|---|---|
| Higher than official agencies | “..between 400 000 and 800 000 people [become] ill in an average flu season, but [at the peak of a pandemic] you would probably be into several million cases” [Chief Medical Officer] | “The virus [is] likely to be two to three times more deadly than seasonal flu...the pandemic could mean that 25–35 per cent of the population would fall ill within three or four months, placing severe strain on the NHS”. |
| Concurring with official agencies | Minister of Health: “There is no cause for anyone to feel there is going to be any danger to them at this stage... Pandemics come along every 20 years and the present outbreak [is] not inevitably going to move to level six”, however [ | “We haven't yet identified any features that give us cause for concern, or that indicate high virulence [...]. It is important that people keep a sense of perspective, because what we observe is what may lead to a pandemic. We don't know that it will lead to a pandemic, although many of us think that this is highly likely”. |
| Lower than official agencies | “Even though the fatality rate is relatively low we will see a lot of people dying because of the large number of people being infected. As more and more cases are reported in the US, we are starting to see some hospitalisations and more severe cases. We may see the same pattern in the UK”. [ | “This might not be any more virulent than normal seasonal flu infections. We feel reassured that if this develops into a pandemic it might not be a particularly severe one”. |
Comments promoting or rejecting the use of neuraminidase inhibitors or vaccine
| Type of comment | Example |
|---|---|
| Promoting the use of neuraminidase inhibitors | “There is no doubt Tamiflu [oseltamivir] will help”. |
| “There is an issue of Tamiflu resistance. All things being equal, it would be nice to get as much Relenza [zanamivir] as we can get our hands on”. | |
| Promoting the use of vaccine | “I think by far the safer option is to wait for the development of a vaccine which will almost certainly be around by the autumn”. |
| “Vaccines are our real hope”. | |
| Rejecting the use of neuraminidase inhibitors | “At present it [Tamiflu] should not be routinely prescribed”. |
| “No one really knows if Tamiflu will significantly reduce transmission; the expectation is it will, but we don't know for sure”. |
Number of academics with competing interests by type of comment
| Type of comment | Number of academics | Number with competing interests (%) |
|---|---|---|
| Promoting the use of NI | 10 | 7 (70) |
| Rejecting the use of NI | 4 | 1 (25) |
| Not commenting on the use of NI | 47 | 10 (21.3) |
| Promoting the use of vaccine | 9 | 5 (55.6) |
| Rejecting the use of vaccine | 0 | 0 (0) |
| Not commenting on the use of vaccine | 52 | 13 (25.5) |
NI, neuraminidase inhibitors.