A digital “Yellow Card” for securely recording vaccinations using Community PKI certificates

Author(s):  
Stephen Wilson
Keyword(s):  
1992 ◽  
Vol 30 (4) ◽  
pp. 16-16

When did you last send in a Yellow Card? Only one doctor in six has ever done so. Adverse reactions, particularly to new drugs, are under-reported by several orders of magnitude. Official regulatory bodies depend on this system and rightly want a strong case before revoking the licence of a drug whose benefits appear to outweigh the risks. The delays can conceal avoidable morbidity and mortality which often emerge only when a scandal breaks.


2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (4_suppl3) ◽  
pp. 2325967120S0022
Author(s):  
Peter K. Kriz ◽  
Jingzhen Yang ◽  
Alan Arakkal ◽  
Timothy Keeley ◽  
R. Dawn Comstock

Background: Pediatric sports-related injuries are common, yet prevention efforts too often go unevaluated. Collins et al. studied nine U.S. high school (HS) sports during 2005/06-2006/07, finding boys’ and girls’ soccer had the highest injury rates related to illegal activity. Several states have implemented yellow card accumulation policies (YCPs) in an effort to prevent injuries. Hypothesis/Purpose: Purpose: Evaluate the effectiveness of YCPs in reducing HS soccer competition injuries by comparing injury rates and patterns in states with and without YCPs. Hypotheses: Athlete-athlete contact injury rates are lower in states with YCPs Severe injuries (concussion, fracture, ACL, injury requiring surgery, injury resulting in > 3 weeks’ time loss) are less prevalent in states with YCPs Gender differences influence the effectiveness of YCPs Methods: Retrospective cohort study of NHFS member state association HS soccer players injured during competition in 2005/06-2017/18. Athlete exposure (AEs) and injury data collected from a national sports injury surveillance system, High School RIO. Poisson regression assessed the effects of YCPs on injury rates and patterns. Results: Of 50 NFHS member states associations, high schools from 47 were represented. Overall, 901 athlete-athlete contact injuries occurred during 352,775 competition AEs in states with YCPs and 3,525 during 1,459,708 AEs in states without YCPs. There was no significant difference in overall contact injury rates (rate ratio [RR] 1.06; 95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.98-1.14) between schools in states with and without YCPs. A small, significant increase in overall contact injury rates was discernable after states’ adoption of YCPs (RR 1.17; 95% CI: 1.03, 1.34), particularly in boys’ soccer (RR 1.32; 95% CI 1.08-1.62). A significantly lower proportion of injuries resulting in > 3 weeks’ time loss occurred in states with YCPs (injury proportion ratio [IPR] 0.81; p=0.047), while other severe injuries did not differ. There were no significant differences in YCPs’ effect by gender (p=0.319). Conclusion: Among HS boys’ and girls’ soccer players, playing in states with YCPs did not lower athlete-athlete contact injury rates, although injuries resulting in > 3 weeks’ time loss were less prevalent in states with YCPs. Athlete-athlete contact injury rates were slightly higher in states following adoption of YCPs, particularly in boys’ soccer. Enactment of YCPs alone, without proper enforcement, may not be a sufficient injury prevention strategy. Further studies assessing the impact of HS soccer YCPs need to consider the effects of state level YCP enforcement, documented illegal activity/foul play, and Fair Play education. Tables/Figures: [Table: see text][Table: see text][Table: see text]


2015 ◽  
Vol 101 (1) ◽  
pp. e1.43-e1
Author(s):  
Dan Hawcutt ◽  
Hannah Maqsood ◽  
Simon Gomberg ◽  
Andrew Riordan ◽  
Mark Turner

AimsThe UK Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) runs a national spontaneous reporting system (Yellow Card Scheme [YCS]) to collect ‘suspected' adverse drug reaction (ADR) data. We aim to describe the Yellow card reports received for patients aged ≤1 year for a 10 year period and assess their utility.MethodsData on all ADRs reported via the YCS in Infants aged ≤1 years from the years 2001–10 were supplied by the MHRA.ResultsIn total, 3217 suspected ADRs were reported to the YCS between 2001–10 for infants age ≤1 year (Neonates n=97, vaccinations n=2673, infant [neither neonate nor vaccine] n=477). Overall only 0.88 YC per day were received by the MHRA with a male preponderance (Male 50.3%, Female 45.7%); only 25 (0.8%) YC reports stated a gestational age for the affected infant. The medications most frequently reported as suspected of causing an ADR were Swine Flu Vaccine (neonates n=8), Neisseria meningitides (vaccinations n=693) and oseltamivir (infants n=37). Reports associated with vaccinations followed the expected trends. ADRs highlighted by regulators for neonatal and infant populations are not represented in the YCs received by the regulator.Conclusions The frequency of YCS reports for those ≤1 year is low, with less than 1 per day overall. Neonates are poorly represented, and recording of gestational age is very limited. The YCS appears to be more effective for spontaneous reporting of vaccination-related ADRs in infants than for other medications. Action is required to improve reporting of suspected ADRs that affect neonates and infants.


2020 ◽  
Vol 21 (3) ◽  
pp. 451-473 ◽  
Author(s):  
Philippe van Gruisen ◽  
Martijn Huysmans

Does the Early Warning System alert the European Commission about the prospects of passing new policy? We present a model of European Union policymaking in which the Early Warning System plays an important signalling role. In our model, the Commission uses signals from the Early Warning System to update its belief about governments’ voting strategies in the Council. The Commission may then anticipate difficult negotiations by withdrawing its proposal early. We find empirical evidence for our theory: (1) reasoned opinions submitted by national parliaments strongly predict opposition from their governments and (2) the Commission is more likely to withdraw proposals that receive reasoned opinions, even in the absence of a yellow card. Our results run counter to the dominant view in the literature that the Early Warning System is not a very relevant aspect of EU decision-making. Instead, reasoned opinions constitute a clear signal that negotiations are more likely to fail.


2013 ◽  
Vol 108 (4) ◽  
pp. 334-341 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. Alban ◽  
J. Dahl ◽  
M. Andreasen ◽  
J.V. Petersen ◽  
M. Sandberg
Keyword(s):  

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