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England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> AB, R (On the Application Of) v Secretary of State for Health and Social Care [2022] EWHC 1996 (Admin) (21 July 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2022/1996.html Cite as: [2022] EWHC 1996 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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The Queen (on the application of AB, a child by her Mother and Litigation Friend, EF) |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Secretary of State for Health and Social Care |
Defendant |
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The Joint Committee for Vaccination and Immunisation |
Interested Party |
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Ewan West and Ruth Keating (instructed by the Government Legal Department) for the Defendant
The Interested Party not appearing and not represented
Hearing dates: 21st July 2022
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Poole:
Procedural History
The Decision
"Overall, the committee is of the opinion that the benefits from vaccination are marginally greater than the potential known harms (tables 1 to 4) but acknowledges that there is considerable uncertainty regarding the magnitude of the potential harms. The margin of benefit, based primarily on a health perspective, is considered too small to support advice on a universal programme of vaccination of otherwise healthy 12 to 15-year-old children at this time. As longer-term data on potential adverse reactions accrue, greater certainty may allow for a reconsideration of the benefits and harms. Such data may not be available for several months.
"JCVI has considered commentary from stakeholders on the benefits of vaccination on the operation of schools and the educational impact of the pandemic on children and young people. JCVI is constituted with expertise to allow consideration of the health benefits and risks of vaccination and it is not within its remit to incorporate in-depth considerations on wider societal impacts, including educational benefits. The government may wish to seek further views on the wider societal and educational impacts from the chief medical officers of the 4 nations, with representation from JCVI in these subsequent discussions. There is considerable uncertainty regarding the impact of vaccination in children and young people on peer-to-peer transmission and transmission in the wider (highly vaccinated) population. Estimates from modelling vary substantially, and the committee is of the view that any impact on transmission may be relatively small, given the lower effectiveness of the vaccine against infection with the Delta variant."
" Overall … the view of the UK CMOs is that the additional likely benefits of reducing educational disruption, and the consequent reduction in public health harm from educational disruption, on balance provide sufficient extra advantage in addition to the marginal advantage at an individual level identified by the JCVI to recommend in favour of vaccinating this group. They therefore recommend on public health grounds that ministers extend the offer of universal vaccination with a first dose of Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine to all children and young people aged 12 to 15 not already covered by existing JCVI advice."
Grounds
i) The JCVI's advice that there was a marginal benefit from vaccination for healthy children was irrational because the evidence showed barely any risk from Covid-19 to those children and the risk of harm to those children from vaccination would be disproportionate. The re-re-amended SFG states, "there was no evidentially sound basis on which the Secretary of State, in making the impugned decision, could rationally and/or reasonably have determined that the benefit to children of authorising and/or offering the Vaccine to children in the relevant age-group outweighed the potential risk, alternatively, … there is no sound evidence that can reasonably be relied upon that their benefit outweighs their risk."
ii) The CMOs' advice to the Defendant was irrational because they failed to model or quantify school absences due to the vaccination programme itself or due to the side-effects of vaccines;
iii) The Defendant acted further irrationally in accepting the advice of the CMOs when (a) the JCVI had not advised "mass vaccination" for this age group and the Defendant did not ask the JCVI to consider the CMOs' advice; and (b) the CMOs' advice was predicated on social grounds not medical grounds.
Evidence
Submissions
i) The absence of data available to the JCVI to justify its advice that vaccination could reduce the incidence of PIMS-TS (an inflammatory condition associated with Covid-19). On 19 July 2021, the JCVI had issued advice in which it noted that it was not known how Covid-19 vaccination might influence the occurrence or severity of PIMS-TS and that the available data were insufficient to advise on Covid-19 vaccination for the prevention of PIMS-TS. The First Claimant says that nothing had changed by 3 September 2021.
ii) There was "irrational reliance" by the JCVI on hospitalisation data within the so-called Warwick model. In particular the model assumed a rate of natural immunisation of 26% within the population whereas more recent evidence was that amongst schoolchildren infection rates were at about 50%.
iii) The Warwick model did not take into account school absences due to the implementation of an immunisation programme for 12-15 year olds or side-effects of the vaccine. It was irrational of the CMOs to take into account a model quantifying school absences without vaccination, whilst not having evidence quantifying school absences due to vaccination.
Discussion and Conclusion
There may also be some educational costs of vaccination: a small amount of school time is likely to be lost as a result of children attending vaccination sessions and some may have side effects of the vaccine that may lead to school absences which are not factored in here.
That caveat does not discredit the usefulness of the modelling, it merely indicates that the caveat has to be taken into account. Since it is stated as a caveat by the CMOs it must be concluded that they did take it into account.