KFL&A Board of Health Advocates to Federal Government for No-fault Compensation for Adverse Effects Following Immunization
Thursday December 3, 2020
For immediate release
KINGSTON – Vaccination is among public health’s greatest achievements in terms of reducing the illness and death associated with disease. Vaccines are safe and effective, but like any medicine, they can cause unwanted or unexpected health effects following immunization, or adverse events. There were approximately 8.6 million doses of vaccine distributed in Ontario in 2018, resulting in 21 serious adverse events being reported. This represents about 1.5 serious adverse events in every 1 million doses distributed.
Serious adverse events after vaccination are very rare. Despite this, the Kingston, Frontenac, and Lennox & Addington (KFL&A) Board of Health is advocating for no-fault compensation for adverse effects following immunization.
No-fault compensation programs are one means by which compensation could be accomplished. The success of the upcoming COVID-19 vaccination campaign requires wide-spread immunization by the public and there is an ethical imperative for a no-fault approach that would bring the mechanism for compensation outside the existing legal system. In jurisdictions where these approaches have been employed, resolution is generally quick, effective, and more consistently applied than via traditional legal channels.
“The number of individuals who experience adverse events as a result of vaccination is extremely low; unfortunately, these individuals bear the burden of adverse events in the service of a public good,” said Dr. Kieran Moore, Medical Officer of Health, KFL&A Public Health. “Given the anticipated scale of COVID-19 mass vaccinations we want to have in place a no-fault approach that brings compensation outside the existing legal system”.
During the KFL&A Board of Health meeting on November 25, 2020, the Board made a commitment to write a letter advocating to the Prime Minister of Canada to support a program of no-fault compensation for adverse outcomes following routine immunizations in Canada.