Smallpox vaccine linked to new problemsCOX
NEWS SERVICE
ATLANTA - More than 50 people have had heart
inflammation after getting the smallpox vaccine, and a
recipient has suffered a brain illness, health officials
said Thursday.
The possible side effects are in addition to three
heart attack deaths reported in March.
Twenty-four civilians have had inflammation of the
heart or surrounding membranes, the Atlanta-based
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said. Another
27 members of the military have had the conditions,
according to the Defense Department.
More than 36,000 civilians and 430,000 military
personnel have been vaccinated since the program started
in January in anticipation of a potential bioterrorism
attack.
Some side effects were expected, but the heart
problems have taken some doctors by surprise. Few
cardiac events were recorded when the vaccinations were
routine in the 1950s and '60s.
Most of those vaccinated decades ago were children,
and the two main tests for detecting heart disease today
hadn't been developed. People getting inoculated now are
adults, many of whom have heart problems or are at risk
for cardiac disease.
The federal campaign to vaccinate a half-million
health-care workers against smallpox has fallen far
short, with 36,600 workers covered as of mid-May.
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