Five children died at Our
Lady’s Children’s Hospital in Crumlin, Dublin, from illnesses that could have
been prevented by immunisation, according to a new study of case files spanning
a four-year period.
The research, which was
carried out by medics based at the children’s hospital and Trinity College
Dublin, examined 39 admissions to the paediatric intensive care unit between
2011 and 2015.
The admissions that formed
part of the study consisted of children affected by a range of illnesses that
can be prevented by immunisation.
Some of the children had not
been vaccinated when they could have been, while others were too young to be
immunised. However, had there been full immunisation in the community, known as
herd immunity, the younger babies would not have been exposed to the diseases,
according to lead author of the report, Dr Suzanne Crowe.
Nine children were admitted
with streptococcus pneumoniae, a bacterial infection that can lead to illnesses
such as pneumonia and meningitis. Death occurred in four of these cases.
One child died from
pertussis or “whooping cough” during the reference period. The child was just
two weeks old – four weeks short of the age at which the relevant vaccine is
administered under the State-funded immunisation programme.
Other diseases included
varicella (chicken pox), haemophilus influenza, and meningococcus B – a
bacterial infection that can cause septicaemia and meningitis.
Of the 34 children who
survived to be discharged, 19 had serious complications including skin loss
requiring grafting, limb and digit loss, seizures, and acute kidney injury.
Read more
on... Vaccination: Deaths at
Children’s Hospital Preventable
Author: Fiona
Gartland

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