Controversial US study on hepatitis B vaccines in Africa is cancelled

US-funded Hepatitis B Vaccine Study Cancelled Amid Criticism of Ethical Concerns

A $1.6 million US-funded study on hepatitis B vaccines among newborns in Guinea-Bissau has been halted indefinitely due to critical questions surrounding its ethics, according to senior officials at the Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

The study, led by Danish researchers, had drawn fierce criticism for withholding vaccines proven to prevent hepatitis B from being administered to 7,000 newborns when they would have "not otherwise received it." This would leave another 7,000 children without access to a vaccine that could potentially save their lives.

"This administration did not see people in Africa as valuable," said Paul Offit, an infectious diseases physician at the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia. "You can't treat children like this, you can't treat people like this. We were able to stand up for them."

The cancellation comes after officials in Guinea-Bissau stated that the trial would still proceed, but with significant changes to address ethical concerns.

Critics argue that the study's design could lead to long-lasting damage and has been compared to the notorious Tuskegee experiment, where US researchers withheld treatment from African American men suffering from syphilis.

"This was a damaging study," said Boghuma Titanji, an assistant professor of medicine at Emory University. "It shows that institutions are getting stronger by pushing back on unethical studies in Africa."

Researchers had argued that some types of vaccines may bring nonspecific effects but failed to provide evidence-based content about their efficacy.

The cancellation is seen as a victory for advocacy groups who pushed for the study's halt, citing concerns over the exploitation of scarce resources and potential harm to African children.

As Guinea-Bissau prepares to implement universal vaccination for all newborns in 2027, officials say the current schedule will remain unchanged until the birth dose is implemented.
 
omg u wont bliev wut just happnd 🤯! those ppl at US CDC wer so clueless!!! cancelling study cuz of ethical concerns? its bout time! they wer puttin lives 2 risk on 7k newborns all 4 nothin 😩. researchers cant jus b so callous & think they c get away w/ it! its like Tuskegee experiment all over again 🤕. advocates did a great job pushin 4 change 💪 & now theres hope 4 universal vaccination in Guinea-Bissau 🌎. cant wait 2 see dat happen!!!
 
😔 this is a crazy thing to happen... think about it if they're gonna cancel the study but still let 7k kids go without life-saving vaccine 🤕 can't really see how that's ethical or responsible... might be some grey areas, but not sure... need more info, seem like a lot of 'maybes' and not enough 'what ifs' 🤷‍♂️
 
idk how can you justify withholding life-saving vaccines from kids just 'cause some ppl think it might have some "nonspecific effects" 🤯? its not like they're giving a placebo or something... sounds like some shady science to me 💉 and what's with the comparison to tuskegee experiment? that was one thing, but this is a whole different level of messed up 🚫
 
💔 I'm literally shook by this news! The fact that a study on something as life-saving as hepatitis B vaccine was even considered without giving those babies proper protection is just mind-boggling 🤯. And to think that some people were actually defending the ethics of withholding vaccines from newborns... what's wrong with these humans?! 😡
 
The whole thing around this hepatitis B vaccine study in Guinea-Bissau just doesn't sit right with me 🤔. I mean, $1.6 million and you're still gonna be like "oh well" if some random babies don't get their vaccines on time? It's like they expected the parents to just magically know that giving vaccines to newborns was optional or something 🙄.

And what really gets me is that there are people out there who think this isn't a big deal, that it's all just some overreaction by "expansionist" folks trying to get in our faces 🤷‍♀️. Newsflash: it's not about being all moralistic and judgmental - it's about basic human decency and the understanding that these are tiny humans we're talking about here.

The fact that they were even considering withholding life-saving vaccines from thousands of babies just shows how far behind some people in power are when it comes to empathy and compassion ❤️. I'm glad advocacy groups pushed for this study to be stopped, because at the end of the day, it's not up for debate - these children deserve to have access to these vaccines no matter what 🙌.
 
I'm really disappointed to hear about this study being cancelled... it's like they were so focused on saving money that they forgot about the lives of these precious little kids 🤕. I mean, come on, a $1.6 million study and we're talking about 7,000 children who could be potentially saved from something as preventable as hepatitis B? It just doesn't add up, you know? And what's with the excuse that some vaccines may bring nonspecific effects? That sounds like a bunch of malarkey to me 🙄. I'm glad advocacy groups were able to push back on this one, though... it's about time someone stood up for the rights of these kids 👊.
 
ugh man... this is so messed up 🤕 what kind of people do a study like that?! withholding life-saving vaccines from kids just cuz of some "ethical concerns" is insane! it's like they're more worried about doing the right thing than saving lives 💉 u gotta wonder how many lives were gonna be lost due to this "study"... and now we all get to deal with the consequences 🤦‍♂️ i mean, who gets to decide what's best for us, anyway? some bunch of researchers in a lab, making rules without even knowing the context or impact on the people they're trying to help?! it's like, hello! let's work together, not tear each other apart 😡
 
I mean come on 🤯... a study that could potentially kill hundreds of babies just because some folks think it's "unethical" 😱? Like what even is the point of conducting a study if not to benefit society? 💸 I'm all for protecting people, but not at the expense of innocent lives. And what about all the resources wasted on this thing already? $1.6 million could've gone a long way in actually helping those kids 🤷‍♀️. I'm glad advocacy groups stepped in and put a stop to it 👏
 
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