Lethbridge Herald

No proof needed to blame vaccines

EU COURT ISSUES RULING

- Maria Cheng THE ASSOCIATED PRESS — LONDON

The highest court of the European Union ruled Wednesday that courts can consider whether a vaccinatio­n led to someone developing an illness even when there is no scientific proof.

The decision was issued on Wednesday in relation to the case of a Frenchman known as Mr. J.W., who was immunized against hepatitis B in late 199899. About a year later, Mr. J.W. was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis. In 2006, he and his family sued vaccine-maker Sanofi Pasteur in an attempt to be compensate­d for the damage they claim he suffered due to the vaccine. Mr. J.W. died in 2011.

France’s Court of Appeal ruled there was no causal link between the hepatitis B vaccine and multiple sclerosis, and dismissed the case. Numerous studies have found no relationsh­ip between the hepatitis B shot and multiple sclerosis.

After the case went to France’s Court of Cassation, it was brought to the European Union.

On Wednesday, the EU’s top court said that despite the lack of scientific consensus on the issue, a vaccine could be considered defective if there is “specific and consistent evidence,” including the time between a vaccine’s administra­tion and the occurrence of a disease, the individual’s previous state of health, the lack of any family history of the disease and a significan­t number of reported cases of the disease occurring following vaccinatio­n.

In a statement, the court said that such factors could lead a national court to conclude that “the administer­ing of the vaccine is the most plausible explanatio­n” for the disease and that “the vaccine therefore does not offer the safety that one is entitled to expect.” It did not rule on the specific French case.

Sanofi Pasteur did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment.

Some vaccine experts slammed the ruling, saying the court’s threshold for linking a vaccine to side effects is too low.

Dr. Paul Offit, a pediatrici­an and vaccines expert at the University of Pennsylvan­ia, said the criteria used by the court made no sense — and are similar to those used by vaccine injury compensati­on programs in the United States.

“Using those criteria, you could reasonably make the case that someone should be compensate­d for developing leukemia after eating a peanut butter sandwich,” he said. Offit said the courts shouldn’t be trusted to make rulings about scientific evidence. “It’s very frustratin­g that they have such a ridiculous­ly low bar for causality,” he said, adding that anti-vaccinatio­n supporters have long relied on such court judgments to bolster their campaign against vaccines.

Offit said the court’s decision was concerning and hoped it wouldn’t spur more people to reject vaccines.

“Vaccines save lives and people who choose not to vaccinate their children are putting those children at risk,” he said. “To prove whether one thing causes another has to happen in a scientific venue, and the courts are not a scientific venue.”

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