Literature DB >> 27174834

Loss of confidence in vaccines following media reports of infant deaths after hepatitis B vaccination in China.

Wenzhou Yu1, Dawei Liu1, Jingshan Zheng1, Yanmin Liu1, Zhijie An1, Lance Rodewald2, Guomin Zhang3, Qiru Su3, Keli Li3, Disha Xu3, Fuzhen Wang3, Ping Yuan3, Wei Xia4, Guijun Ning3, Hui Zheng3, Yaozhu Chu3, Jian Cui3, Mengjuan Duan3, Lixin Hao3, Yuqing Zhou3, Zhenhua Wu3, Xuan Zhang3, Fuqiang Cui3, Li Li3, Huaqing Wang3.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: China reduced hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection by 90% among children under 5 years old with safe and effective hepatitis B vaccines (HepB). In December 2013, this success was threatened by widespread media reports of infant deaths following HepB administration. Seventeen deaths and one case of anaphylactic shock following HBV vaccination had been reported.
METHODS: We conducted a telephone survey to measure parental confidence in HepB in eleven provinces at four points in time; reviewed maternal HBV status and use of HepB for newborns in birth hospitals in eight provinces before and after the event; and monitored coverage with hepatitis B vaccine and other programme vaccines in ten provinces.
RESULTS: HepB from the implicated company was suspended during the investigation, which showed that the deaths were not caused by HepB vaccination. Before the event, 85% respondents regarded domestic vaccines as safe, decreasing to 26.7% during the event. During the height of the crisis, 30% of parents reported being hesitant to vaccinate and 18.4% reported they would refuse HepB. Use of HepB in the monitored provinces decreased by 18.6%, from 53 653 doses the week before the event to 43 688 doses during the week that Biokangtai HepB was suspended. Use of HepB within the first day of life decreased by 10% among infants born to HBsAg-negative mothers, and by 6% among infants born to HBsAg-positive mothers. Vaccine refusal and HepB birth dose rates returned to baseline within 2 months; confidence increased, but remained below baseline.
CONCLUSIONS: The HBV vaccine event resulted in the suspension of a safe vaccine, which was associated with a decline of parental confidence, and refusal of vaccination. Suspension of a vaccine can lead to loss of confidence that is difficult to recover. Timely and credible investigation, accompanied by proactive outreach to stakeholders and the media, may help mitigate negative impact of future coincidental adverse events following immunization.
© The Author 2016; all rights reserved. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the International Epidemiological Association.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Hepatitis B vaccination; coincidental death; communication; vaccine confidence

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2016        PMID: 27174834     DOI: 10.1093/ije/dyv349

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Epidemiol        ISSN: 0300-5771            Impact factor:   7.196


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