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The Precautionary Principle

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The blood system is confronted with the potential new infectious threat from vCJD ... iatrogenic. variant. Classical CJD. develops in 6th to 8th decade of life ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Precautionary Principle


1
The Precautionary Principle
  • Managing theoretical risks in public health

2
Policy Problem
  • The blood system is confronted with the potential
    new infectious threat from vCJD
  • Must take measures to protect against this
    theoretical risk
  • Must balance theoretical reduction in supply that
    could be caused by developing a policy

3
Background
4
CJD
  • Most common human TSE
  • Due to effects of prion
  • 4 Forms
  • classical
  • familial
  • iatrogenic
  • variant

5
Classical CJD
  • develops in 6th to 8th decade of life
  • rapidly progressing dementia
  • cerebellar symptoms
  • death within 3 to 12 months

6
Variant CJD
  • Variant CJD first identified in 1996 in UK
  • average age of onset 27
  • presents with behavioural symptoms
  • invariably fatal, average duration of symptoms of
    14 months

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Diagnosis/Treatment
  • No blood test
  • No treatment

9
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10
Policy Challenge
11
vCJD and the blood supply
  • First theoretical infectious risk to challenge
    the Canadian blood system since the Krever
    Inquiry

12
  • UK Events
  • Concerns soon developed that this condition may
    be blood transmitted
  • led to a UK decision to import certain blood
    product requirements from other countries

13
  • Canadian officials immediately began considering
    whether Canada should use blood from individuals
    who had traveled to the UK

14
What information is needed to develop policy?
  • Risk of transmission of vCJD
  • Reduction in blood supply of any policy
  • How much reduction in the blood supply could the
    sytem sustain

15
Risk of Transmission of Classical CJD Case
control studies
16
Risk of Blood Transmission of vCJD
  • No epidemiological studies
  • Theoretical Risk
  • higher prion concentration
  • affinity for lymphoreticular system
  • existing model for peripheral transmission (oral)

17
Impact of Donor Deferral Policies
  • Full deferral
  • 22 reduction
  • 1 month deferral
  • 10 reduction
  • 6 month deferral
  • 3 reduction

18
Sustainability of Blood Supply Reduction
  • Blood system had been able to sustain a 3
    reduction in supply in the past

19
What Policy should be instituted?
20
Options
  • No policy should be instituted
  • vCJD is a theoretical risk, there is no
    epidemiological evidence of harm
  • A partial policy should be instituted
  • balances reducing the risk of vCJD with potential
    harm caused by reducing the blood supply
  • Full policy should be instituted
  • even 1 day in the UK puts you at risk

21
Canadian Response
  • Canadian blood system embarked upon risk
    assessment analysis
  • conducted a systematic evaluation of the impact
    on supply of a donor deferral policy versus the
    potential health benefit of such a policy.

22
Policy Decision
  • August 1999, policy-makers officially announced
    that individuals who had traveled to the UK for
    6-months between the years 1980 and 1996 would be
    deferred from donating blood

23
  • Is this Evidence-Based Decision-Making?

24
Factors Influencing Policy Process
25
Importance of Value Systems on Interpretation of
Scientific Information
  • Role of the Precautionary Principle

26
Limitations of evidence
  • In 1986 BSE is discovered in the UK
  • no epidemiological evidence exists of harm,
    however there is a theoretical risk of
    transmission
  • UK chose not to take actions to halt spread of
    BSE
  • important health impact, enormous financial
    impact, undermined confidence in public health

27
  • In 1980s concern emerged about potential blood
    transmission of HIV and Hepatitis C
  • no epidemiological evidence exists of harm,
    however there was a theoretical risk of
    transmission
  • Canada chose not to take full measures to protect
    blood supply from HIV, Hep C
  • enormous health and financial impact, undermined
    confidence in blood system

28
  • Both government responses criticized for not
    taking precautionary measures

29
  • the safety of the blood supply is an aspect of
    public health, and, therefore, the blood supply
    system must be governed by the public health
    philosophy, which rejects the view that complete
    knowledge of a public health hazard is a
    prerequisite for action.
  • Justice Krever

30
The Precautionary Principle
  • The precautionary principle emerged out of the
    European environmental movement of the 1970s and
    has its roots in the German concept of Vorsorge
    or foresight.

31
  • The principle reflects a recognition of the
    limitations of scientific models to accurately
    describe complex issues pertaining to
    environmental harm or health risk

32
Impact
  • Since the time of its introduction, the
    precautionary principle has had a substantial
    impact on environmental policy
  • It has been incorporated into the 1992 Rio
    Declaration on Environment and Development and
    the Maastricht Treaty Establishing the European
    Community

33
Definition
  • The precautionary principle essentially states
    that complete evidence of risk does not have to
    exist to protect individuals and society from the
    risk
  • Better to be safe than sorry
  • An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure

34
  • When an activity raises threats of harm to human
    health or the environment, precautionary measures
    should be taken even if some cause and effect
    relationships are not fully established
    scientifically.  In this context the proponent of
    an activity, rather than the public, should bear
    the burden of proof.
  • Wingspread Statement

35
  • Where there are threats of serious or
    irreversible damage, lack of full scientific
    certainty shall not be used as a reason for
    postponing cost-effective measures to prevent
    environmental degradation.
  • Rio Declaration

36
Interpretations of the Principle
  • Stronger interpretations
  • burden of responsibility on the proponents of
    potentially harmful measures
  • Weaker interpretations
  • burden of proof on those arguing the possibility
    of harm

37
Core Concepts
  • (1) advocating anticipatory action to prevent
    harm
  • (2) shifting some of the burden of proof to the
    proponents of new technologies to demonstrate
    safety

38
  • (3) advocating a consideration of all
    alternatives to a new technology including doing
    nothing
  • (4) incorporation of all affected parties in the
    decision- making process of adopting a new
    technology

39
Problems with Precaution
40
  • Policy makers have had difficulty in agreeing on
    how much or how little evidence is required to
    trigger a precautionary action and on the role of
    the scientific process when the principle is
    utilized

41
  • The variability in the interpretation of the
    principle has led to accusations that the
    principle has been used as a mechanism to
    introduce trade protectionism.

42
  • The principle has also been accused of
  • producing over regulation
  • denying the public the benefits of new
    technologies
  • arousing unnecessary fear in the public about
    theoretical risks

43
Applications
  • Primarily has been used in the environmental
    sector
  • Increasingly being used in the health sector
  • Implications of applying an environmental
    measure to the health sector has not been fully
    examined

44
Challenge of Balancing Competing Risks
  • recognizing that in the application of the
    precautionary principle strictly to health, that
    there are some potential problems in exercising
    restraint when it involves a therapeutic
    product, the absence of (which) may in itself
    have a risk consequence to a patient population

45
Is the Precautionary Principle Useful in Public
Health?
46
Double Edged Sword
  • Environmental Sector
  • Balance benefits to health and the environment
    versus economic and technological losses
  • Health Sector
  • Balance benefits to health against possible
    health consequences

47
Examples of inappropriate Precaution
  • DDT and environmental harm
  • Banned because of environmental harm based on
    animal evidence
  • Increase in malaria deaths
  • Chlorine and cancer
  • Peru banned chlorine because of carcinogenic
    fears
  • Cholera outbreak followed
  • GMOs and biodiversity
  • EU banned import of GMOs due to theoretical
    fears of harm
  • Zambia refused large donation of GMOs in the
    presence of famine

48
Proposed Solutions
  • Proportionality
  • Non-discrimination
  • Consistency
  • Examining costs and benefits
  • Subject to review
  • Assigning responsibility for producing scientific
    evidence

49
How can the Precautionary Principle be applied?
  • 4 mechanisms of application of the Precautionary
    Principle

50
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51
The precautionary principle and evidence-based
policy
  • The fundamental question related to application
    of the precautionary principle is what is an
    acceptable level of uncertainty of risk
  • How much systematic and random error are policy
    makers willing to accept

52
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53
Follow-up to vCJD Donor deferral decision
54
Subsequent events
  • Extended to all of Europe
  • UK residency period reduced to 3 months
  • Canada and US have first cases of vCJD
  • Animal studies suggest blood transmission is
    possible
  • Four case reports of transfusion transmission

55
Relationship of Evidence to Policy
56
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57
Evaluation of Precaution in the vCJD donor
deferral decision
58
Conclusions
  • The precautionary principle in its broadest
    context is a useful and necessary tool to policy
    makers.
  • In order for it to be an effective policy guide
    further refinements to the principle are needed
    and a precautionary principle specific for the
    health sector needs to be developed.

59
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