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Page 1: Vaccination in the EU, ENVI Committee, European Parliament 17 June 2015

ENVI Committee exchange of view

Vaccination in the EU: benefits and barriersProf Mike Catchpole, Chief ScientistEuropean Centre for Disease Prevention and ControlENVI Committee 17 June 2015, European Parliament, Brussels

Page 2: Vaccination in the EU, ENVI Committee, European Parliament 17 June 2015

December 2004 October 2012

Why do EU Member States have vaccination programmes? To protect the health of Europeans

Page 3: Vaccination in the EU, ENVI Committee, European Parliament 17 June 2015

Finland - reported measles, mumps, and rubella through November, 2007, since 1915 for measles, 1943 for mumps, and 1957 for rubella*

*Peltola et al Measles, mumps, and rubella in Finland: 25 years of a nationwide elimination programme Lancet 2008; issue 8 vol 12; 796–803

Through MMR vaccination

measles complications averted Hospitalisations: 1 per 5 cases Otitis media: 1 per 11 casesPneumonia: 1 per 12 casesEncephalitis: 1 per 1,000 casesSubacute sclerosing panencephalitis: 1 per 100,000Deaths: 1 per 1,000 to 5,000 cases

mumps complications avertedHospitalisations: 1 per 25 casesMeningitis: 1 per 12 cases Bilateral orchitis: 1 per 30 casesEncephalitis: 1 per 300 casesPancreatitis: 1 per 500 casesHearing impairment: 1 per 300 to 1,000 cases

rubella complications avertedCongenital rubella syndrome: 1 per 400 casesPost-infectious encephalopathy: 1 per 500,000 cases

Page 4: Vaccination in the EU, ENVI Committee, European Parliament 17 June 2015

Vaccines used in EU are highly safe

Page 5: Vaccination in the EU, ENVI Committee, European Parliament 17 June 2015
Page 6: Vaccination in the EU, ENVI Committee, European Parliament 17 June 2015

Vaccination policy in Europe is not achieving its public health goalsExample: elimination of measles in Europe by 2010, 2015, 2020 (?!)

Source: TESSy data on measles cases reported 1 January – 30 April 2015; Measles vaccine coverage (two doses, 2012 – 2013)

Page 7: Vaccination in the EU, ENVI Committee, European Parliament 17 June 2015

EU citizens still die from vaccine preventable diseases! The threat continues

Page 8: Vaccination in the EU, ENVI Committee, European Parliament 17 June 2015

Why vaccination targets are not met (1): Vaccine hesitancy

• Influenced by issues of confidence (level of trust in vaccine or provider), complacency (do not perceive need for vaccine) and convenience (access).

• Hesitant citizens may: i) accept all vaccines but remain concerned; or ii) refuse or delay some vaccines; or iii) refuse all vaccines

• Results of the ECDC study:– Main concern/ fear: vaccine safety– Hesitancy among healthcare professionals

Vaccine safetyconcerns

Incidence of disease

Source: Rapid literature review on motivating hesitant population groups in Europe to vaccinate, ECDC, 2015 (under editing).

Page 9: Vaccination in the EU, ENVI Committee, European Parliament 17 June 2015

Why vaccination targets are not met (2):

Under-served population groups

Photo credits: www.vam.ac.uk/moc/images/image/36307-popup.html, by Eithne Nighingale http://www.flickr.com/photos/87563734@N00/ by Henri Weisen

Page 10: Vaccination in the EU, ENVI Committee, European Parliament 17 June 2015

Why vaccination targets are not met (3):

Vaccine availability• Currently, almost one third of Member States have

reported difficulties in procuring vaccines for the vaccination of infants against pertussis (whooping cough).

• Three out of nine influenza vaccine producers in EU closed production in the last two years (Baxter, Crucell & Cantacuzzino).

Page 11: Vaccination in the EU, ENVI Committee, European Parliament 17 June 2015

Strengthening prevention and control: What ECDC is currently doing

2015 will aim at: Supporting in responding to the existing and

upcoming Council Conclusions on immunisation

Providing evidence-based communication tools for reaching hesitant groups

Fostering exchange of knowledge to strengthen vaccination programmes - VENICE project

Coordinating and supporting EU-wide VPD network

Supporting Member States with country visits upon request

ECDC works in a multi-disciplinary approach…

…to support and strengthen prevention and control efforts on vaccine preventable diseases (VPDs) in the EU/EEA.

Page 12: Vaccination in the EU, ENVI Committee, European Parliament 17 June 2015

What more can be done at EU level?

• Support for EU level projects on key issues such as:– vaccine hesitancy– under-served populations – immunity gaps etc.

• EU action to further improve evidence-base for public health (national and EU level) decisions on vaccination policy

– ECDC guidance– Robust vaccine monitoring data