| No images? Click here ![]() Friday, 13 February 2026 Statement on the planned hepatitis B birth dose vaccine trial in Guinea-Bissau The World Health Organization (WHO) underscores that the hepatitis B birth dose vaccine is an effective, and essential public health intervention, with a proven record. It prevents life‑threatening liver disease by stopping mother‑to‑child transmission at birth. It has been used for over three decades, with more than 115 countries including it in their national schedules. Protecting newborns with a timely birth dose not only provides individual benefit but is also central to national and global elimination efforts. In response to recent questions from the media, WHO would like to state the following: WHO is aware of the proposed randomized controlled trial (RCT) on the hepatitis B birth dose vaccine in Guinea‑Bissau. Based on questions raised in publicly available information and consultation with relevant experts, WHO has significant concerns regarding the study’s scientific justification, ethical safeguards, and overall alignment with established principles for research involving human participants. Why withholding the vaccine is unethical
In its current form, and based on publicly available information, the trial is inconsistent with established ethical and scientific principles. WHO is aware that Guinea-Bissau has suspended the study pending further technical reviews. WHO stands ready to support Guinea‑Bissau as it considers its way forward and in accelerating the introduction of the birth dose and strengthening implementation through:
WHO remains committed to working with national authorities, researchers, and partners to ensure that all newborns – in Guinea‑Bissau and worldwide – receive timely, evidence‑based protection against hepatitis B, and that research conducted in this area meets the highest ethical and scientific standards. Editor’s note Hepatitis B causes hundreds of thousands of deaths globally each year. Transmission at birth is the most common route to lifelong infection; ~90% of newborns infected during childbirth become chronic carriers at high risk of cirrhosis and liver cancer. In Guinea‑Bissau, >12% of adults are estimated to be living with chronic hepatitis B (2022), and infection in children under five (~2% in 2020) is far above the global target (≤0.1%). Guinea‑Bissau formally decided in 2024 to add the hepatitis B birth dose to its national schedule, with introduction planned by 2028. This policy decision affirms the vaccine’s value and further underscores the ethical imperative not to deny newborns timely protection. Media contact: You are receiving this NO-REPLY email because you are included on a WHO mail list. |
Friday, February 13, 2026
Statement on the planned hepatitis B birth dose vaccine trial in Guinea-Bissau
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