2 Matching Annotations
  1. Jul 2018
    1. On 2014 Mar 05, Jacob Puliyel commented:

      IT IS EXPEDIENT BUT IS IT PRUDENT TO LABEL ADVERSE EVENTS FOLLOWING IMMUNIZATION AS 'NOT AN EVENT OF [AEFI]'?

      The old scheme of monitoring signals for vaccine safety (adverse events following immunization – AEFI monitoring), of the Advisory Committee on Causality Assessment Collet JP, 2000 has been overtaken by the Revised WHO Classification of AEFI. The changes have been described in 4 PubMed articles Tozzi AE, 2013, Bonhoeffer J, 2009, Halsey NA, 2012, Williams SE, 2013.

      I wrote two very detailed comments to the article by Tozzi et al Tozzi AE, 2013 on the PubMed Commons which is envisaged as a forum for open constructive criticism and discussion of scientific issues. To facilitate meaningful discussion it has a link to 'Invite an author to comment'. Tozzi and colleagues have not responded so far. PubMed suggests that the main reason for not getting a response is a changed email contact address.

      As this is a matter of patient safety I think it is important that the experts who understand the new scheme must explain why the revision was needed and that it is an improvement over the old scheme - that it will not miss opportunities of picking up new signals by classifying AEFI as 'Not a case of [AEFI]'. I will not repeat the posting but it may be viewed here

      The purpose of this posting is to invite the learned authors of this article on causality assessment Bonhoeffer J, 2009 to respond. The article by Bonhoeffer and colleagues mostly describes a guideline for collection of data which is unexceptional, but the subsequent 'analysis and presentation of vaccine safety data in the surveillance system' may cause signals to be ignored because they are classified as ‘Not a case of [AEFI]’. Would the new scheme have picked up and flagged signals of adverse-effects like the RotaShield-reactions, had the scheme been in use in 1998?


      This comment, imported by Hypothesis from PubMed Commons, is licensed under CC BY.

  2. Feb 2018
    1. On 2014 Mar 05, Jacob Puliyel commented:

      IT IS EXPEDIENT BUT IS IT PRUDENT TO LABEL ADVERSE EVENTS FOLLOWING IMMUNIZATION AS 'NOT AN EVENT OF [AEFI]'?

      The old scheme of monitoring signals for vaccine safety (adverse events following immunization – AEFI monitoring), of the Advisory Committee on Causality Assessment Collet JP, 2000 has been overtaken by the Revised WHO Classification of AEFI. The changes have been described in 4 PubMed articles Tozzi AE, 2013, Bonhoeffer J, 2009, Halsey NA, 2012, Williams SE, 2013.

      I wrote two very detailed comments to the article by Tozzi et al Tozzi AE, 2013 on the PubMed Commons which is envisaged as a forum for open constructive criticism and discussion of scientific issues. To facilitate meaningful discussion it has a link to 'Invite an author to comment'. Tozzi and colleagues have not responded so far. PubMed suggests that the main reason for not getting a response is a changed email contact address.

      As this is a matter of patient safety I think it is important that the experts who understand the new scheme must explain why the revision was needed and that it is an improvement over the old scheme - that it will not miss opportunities of picking up new signals by classifying AEFI as 'Not a case of [AEFI]'. I will not repeat the posting but it may be viewed here

      The purpose of this posting is to invite the learned authors of this article on causality assessment Bonhoeffer J, 2009 to respond. The article by Bonhoeffer and colleagues mostly describes a guideline for collection of data which is unexceptional, but the subsequent 'analysis and presentation of vaccine safety data in the surveillance system' may cause signals to be ignored because they are classified as ‘Not a case of [AEFI]’. Would the new scheme have picked up and flagged signals of adverse-effects like the RotaShield-reactions, had the scheme been in use in 1998?


      This comment, imported by Hypothesis from PubMed Commons, is licensed under CC BY.