Skip to main content
Netherlands News in English

Main navigation

  • Top stories
  • Health
  • Crime
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Tech
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Weird
  • 1-1-2
Image
Vaccination
Vaccination - Credit: Photo: oksun70/DepositPhotos
Health
meningococcal bacterium type W
Meningococcus
meningococcus B
vaccination
national vaccination program
Tweede Kamer
UMC Groningen
UMC Utrecht
GSK
Dirkje Postma
Patricia Bruijning-Verhagen
Dutch Health Council
Monday, 21 January 2019 - 15:40

Share this article:

Vaccinate Dutch kids against more diseases: experts

The Netherlands' national vaccination program works - some 450 children's lives are saved through it every year - but it is too limited. The Dutch government must include more infectious diseases in the national vaccination program, multiple vaccination experts said in advise to the Tweede Kamer, AD reports.

The Tweede Kamer, the lower house of Dutch parliament, is discussing vaccinations on Monday. A range of experts, including researchers and manufactures, sent in their opinions and advice beforehand. Especially the vaccination against meningococcus B is often mentioned. Children in the UK have been getting this vaccine since 2015, while it still isn't part of the Netherlands' vaccination program. An infection from a meningococcal bacteria can turn into meningitis or sepsis. Meningococcus B is most common in children under the age of 5.

"To begin with, we would have to set the limit for the costs of effectiveness of vaccines the same as for other medical interventions", Professor Dirkje Postma of the University Medical Center Groningen said to AD. He called it strange that a new drug in the world of oncology is allowed to cost 80 thousand euros per year of life gained, but wen it comes to saving children's lives with a vaccine, the limit is 20 thousand euros.

According to Patricia Bruijning-Verhagen, pediatrician at UMC Utrecht, the government forgets the enormously high costs that arise if a child gets meningococcal disease. Not only from expensive treatment, but also in the consequences for the environment or society. These costs must form part of the calculations in future, she said, according to the newspaper.

According to pharmaceutical company GSK, the Dutch government did not act quickly enough a few years ago when there were signs of a meningococcus W outbreak. It took a year for vaccines to be ordered. "A proactive policy could have saved a lot of lives. What happened here with meningococcus W, can also happen with meningococcus B."

In December the Dutch Health Council reported that a vaccine against meningococcus B is available, but how effective it is in reducing the number of cases is still unknown. The vaccine also has side effects, like fever, which is why it isn't included int he National Vaccination Program.

GSK told AD that the Health Council's decision not to include the meningococcus B vaccine in the national program will result in about 80 diagnoses of the disease each year, including 5 deaths and 24 cases of disability.

More like this

Image
Doctor vaccinating a baby girl
MP's push for childcare to refuse unvaccinated children if vaccination rate drops
Image
Doctor vaccinating a baby girl
Rutte’s party pushing childcare vaccine mandate after whooping cough, measles outbreaks
Image
Vaccination
Expanding vaccination program will give Netherlands more benefits than costs
Image
Meningococcal Vaccine Vial
Dutch health council rejects inclusion of meningococcal B vaccine in national programme
Make NL Times your top Google source

Follow us:

Latest stories

  • Thousands of Dutch face up to three years’ delays for higher-capacity grid connections
  • Cop claims he was unaware woman he pushed down at asylum shelter was pregnant
  • Highest Dutch business court overturns Volkswagen diesel emissions scandal fine
  • BBB Senate faction opposes conversion therapy ban despite earlier support
  • KLM cancels Uganda flights amid Ebola-related travel restrictions

Top stories

  • Football coach jailed for secretly filming over 500 boys in changing rooms
  • U.S. Embassy: Dutch World Cup fans can face long passport lines, social media checks
  • Tata Steel drops new Sustainability Chief Pols over pro-apartheid past in South Africa
  • Waiting times of a year or longer at some Dutch hospitals as doctor shortage grows
  • Video: One killed, two hurt in stabbing at Heerhugowaard business

© 2012-2026, NL Times, All rights reserved.

Footer menu

  • Change Privacy Settings
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
  • Partner Content