South Korea sticks to flu vaccine plan despite safety fears after 25 die
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[October 22, 2020]
By Hyonhee Shin and Sangmi Cha
SEOUL (Reuters) - South Korean officials
refused on Thursday to suspend a seasonal influenza inoculation effort,
despite growing calls for a halt, including an appeal from a key group
of doctors, after the deaths of at least 25 of those vaccinated.
Health authorities said they found no direct links between the deaths
and the vaccines.
At least 22 of the dead, including a 17-year-old boy, were part of a
campaign to inoculate 19 million teenagers and senior citizens for free,
the Korea Disease Control and Prevention Agency (KDCA) said.
"The number of deaths has increased, but our team sees low possibility
that the deaths resulted from the shots," the agency's director, Jeong
Eun-kyeong, told parliament.
South Korea ordered a fifth more flu vaccines this year to ward off what
it calls a "twindemic", or the prospect that people with flu develop
coronavirus complications and overburden hospitals in winter.
"I understand and regret that people are concerned about the vaccine,"
said Health Minister Park Neung-hoo, who confirmed the free programme
would go ahead.
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"We're looking into the causes but will again thoroughly examine the
entire process in which various government agencies are involved, from
production to distribution."
Vaccine providers include domestic firms such as GC Pharma, SK
Bioscience, Korea Vaccine and Boryung Biopharma Co. Ltd., a unit of
Boryung Pharm Co. Ltd., along with France's Sanofi.
They supply both the free programme and paid services that together aim
to vaccinate about 30 million of a population of 52 million.
Of the 25 dead, 10 received products from SK Bioscience, 5 each from
Boryung and GC Pharma, one from Korea Vaccine and four from Sanofi.
All four domestic firms declined to comment, while Sanofi did not
immediately reply to requests for comment.
It was not immediately clear if any of the vaccines made in South Korea
were exported, or if those supplied by Sanofi were also being used
elsewhere.
The Korean Medical Association, an influential grouping of doctors,
urged the government to halt all inoculation programmes for now, to
allay public concerns and ensure the vaccines were safe.
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![](../images/102220pics/news_a61.jpg)
Choi Dae-zip, president of the Korean Medical Association, speaks
during a news conference following the deaths of at least 13 people
who received a flu vaccine in recent days, in Seoul, South Korea,
October 22, 2020. Yonhap via REUTERS
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Kim Chong-in, leader of the main opposition People Power party,
wanted the programme halted until the causes of the deaths were
verified.
But health authorities have said a preliminary investigation into
six deaths found no direct link to the vaccines, with no toxic
substances uncovered.
KDCA data on Thursday showed at least seven of the nine people it
investigated had underlying conditions.
EARLIER SUSPENSION
The free programme has proved controversial since it began last
month. The launch had been suspended for three weeks after the
discovery that about 5 million doses were kept at room temperature
rather than being refrigerated, as required.
Officials said 8.3 million people had been inoculated since the
programme resumed on Oct. 13, with about 350 cases of adverse
reactions reported.
A separate paid programme allows buyers to pick from a larger pool
of firms that make free vaccines and others.
The most deaths in South Korea linked to seasonal flu vaccinations
was six in 2005, the Yonhap news agency said. Officials have said
comparisons to previous years are tough, since more people are
taking the vaccine this year.
Kim Myung-suk, 65, is among a growing number of South Koreans who
decided to pay for a vaccine of their choice, despite being eligible
for a free dose.
"Though just a few people died so far, the number is growing and
that makes me uneasy," she told Reuters in the capital, Seoul. "So
I'm getting a shot somewhere else and will pay for it."
(Reporting by Hyonhee Shin; Additional reporting by Sangmi Cha,
Dogyun Kim, Daewoung Kim and Heekyong Yang; Editing by Clarence
Fernandez)
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