Guinea-Bissau halts US-backed hepatitis B vaccine trial amid ethical and sovereignty concerns

TL;DR Summary
Guinea-Bissau suspended a US-funded, Denmark-led hepatitis B vaccine trial after ethics-review gaps and concerns about consent, with the health ministry citing sovereignty as the deciding factor. The Africa CDC will review the protocol alongside invited US and Danish officials, amid criticism from some experts and a political shift following a coup. The trial design—with 7,000 infants vaccinated at birth and 7,000 withheld for comparison—raised ethical alarms, contrasting with WHO guidance that recommends newborn vaccination within 24 hours and Guinea-Bissau’s current six-week schedule; the outcome will hinge on the ministry’s decision.
- ‘It’s the sovereignty of the country’: Guinea-Bissau says US vaccine study suspended The Guardian
- RFK Jr. Plan to Test a Vaccine in West African Babies Is Blocked The New York Times
- A vaccine trial is called 'unethical' and a 'unique' opportunity. Is it on or off? NPR
- CDC-funded hep B vaccine study in Africa suspended pending review, officials say CIDRAP
- Opinion | Trump’s HHS is backing a study in Africa that is drawing comparisons to the Tuskegee experiment MS NOW
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