Health chief urges pregnant women: Get the jab
Worried mothers-to-be are being urged to set aside unproven concerns that the human swine flu (H1N1) vaccination can hurt the unborn and to go ahead and get the jab.
Monday, January 25, 2010
Worried mothers-to-be are being urged to set aside unproven concerns that the human swine flu (H1N1) vaccination can hurt the unborn and to go ahead and get the jab.
The plea was made as Hong Kong's health chief said it would have been "irresponsible" if the government had not advised pregnant women to get vaccinated against H1N1 for they have a much greater risk of serious illness than most people if they are stricken with the pandemic flu.
Secretary for Food and Health York Chow Yat-ngok was defending the vaccination policy after two women suffered stillbirths on a single day last week.
That was just weeks after they received the jab.
A 33-year-old woman lost her 37-week unborn baby on Tuesday after receiving the vaccine on December 27. But she was suffering from gestational diabetes when admitted to Queen Elizabeth Hospital, health authorities said at the weekend.
On the same day, a 37-year-old woman suffered a stillbirth at Tuen Mun Hospital. She got the jab on December 28.
"We still have not been able to confirm the cause of death," Chow said of the Tuen Mun case, but he insisted no evidence has been found to connect the stillbirth to the vaccine.
Investigations for common causes of stillbirths - including infection and genetic and metabolic disorders - are being carried out in both cases.
From 150 to 220 stillbirths are recorded in Hong Kong every year.
Meanwhile, Chow said there is no scientific evidence and therefore no reason to change the vaccination policy for high-risk groups.
Pregnant women have 10 times the risk of serious complications from the flu that require hospital attention, he said, and in some cases the virus means death.
"If we did not have [this policy] it would be irresponsible," he said of the recommendation that pregnant women be vaccinated.
Worldwide, there has not been confirmation of any flu vaccine causing fetal deaths - a fact that had Chow cautioning: "We must be very careful to draw conclusions."
Chow's plea was echoed by Shane Solomon, chief executive of the Hospital Authority.
He urged pregnant women to receive the jab because the risk of them needing intensive care in hospital is 10 times greater than that other people face.
While pregnant women remain high on the flu fighters' worry list, fears are easing over youngsters because many have built up an immunity to H1N1.
If recommendations by scientific committees of the Centre for Health Protection are accepted, primary school children will not be a target of a mass- vaccination program.
The committees examined "local serology data, which show that about half of the children have adequate antibody levels," a spokesman said.
That suggests "a substantial number" already have immunity against the coming second wave of flu.
So "the scientific committees do not regard primary school children as a special target group recommended for vaccination."
The Standard - China's Business Newspaper