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http://search.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/nn20110113a4.html

Thursday, Jan. 13, 2011

Government redress OK seen for hepatitis B carriers

Kyodo News

The government plans to basically accept a court proposal for the state to pay

¥500,000 to each asymptomatic hepatitis B virus carrier believed to have been

infected during nationwide group vaccinations, four Cabinet ministers said

Wednesday.

" We agreed to faithfully consider the court proposal, " Health, Labor and Welfare

Minister Ritsuo Hosokawa told reporters after his meeting with Chief Cabinet

Secretary Yoshito Sengoku, national policy minister Koichiro Gemba and Finance

Minister Yoshihiko Noda.

The Sapporo District Court made the proposal Tuesday during court-mediated

settlement negotiations between the state and five plaintiffs from Hokkaido.

Whether to cover asymptomatic carriers was the most controversial point of the

settlement package.

If the government accepts the proposal, payment is expected to exceed ¥3

trillion, compared with the original plan of paying some ¥2 trillion for

hepatitis B sufferers, government sources said.

The government will have to consider how it will raise the financial resources

for the bigger-than-expected damages payment, as well as a special law to help

hepatitis B sufferers and carriers, they said.

A total of 621 people have filed damage suits since March 2008 with 10 district

courts. The plaintiffs argue the government should have stopped group

vaccinations in cases where needles were used repeatedly.

Last March, the Sapporo District Court was the first to urge the parties to

reach a settlement.

Issuing the first judicial view in the series of lawsuits over the infections

from group vaccinations, the court also called on the state to pay between ¥12.5

million and ¥36 million to those who have developed hepatitis B, depending on

their condition.

The plaintiffs and their lawyers will hold a meeting in Tokyo on Jan. 22 to make

an official decision on the proposal, and are expected to accept the offer,

saying it will cover all of the plaintiffs in the series of lawsuits.

The next round of negotiations will be held Feb. 15.

The government has so far denied carriers who do not show symptoms of the

disease the right to claim compensation on grounds that the statutory limit of

20 years has passed since the vaccinations took place, and instead proposed

offering subsidies for medical checkups.

Against this backdrop, the district court's determination had been the main

focus of the settlement negotiations, which began last May before similar suits

filed at other courts by victims of the vaccinations.

In presenting the proposal Tuesday, presiding Judge Shunichi Ishibashi said the

payments of ¥500,000 should be regarded as " expenses for past regular medical

checkups. "

Aside from settlement and subsidies for checkups, the court also urged the state

to make payments to individuals of up to ¥30,000 a year to cover transportation

and other expenses incurred in undergoing health checkups.

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http://search.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/nn20110113a4.html

Thursday, Jan. 13, 2011

Government redress OK seen for hepatitis B carriers

Kyodo News

The government plans to basically accept a court proposal for the state to pay

¥500,000 to each asymptomatic hepatitis B virus carrier believed to have been

infected during nationwide group vaccinations, four Cabinet ministers said

Wednesday.

" We agreed to faithfully consider the court proposal, " Health, Labor and Welfare

Minister Ritsuo Hosokawa told reporters after his meeting with Chief Cabinet

Secretary Yoshito Sengoku, national policy minister Koichiro Gemba and Finance

Minister Yoshihiko Noda.

The Sapporo District Court made the proposal Tuesday during court-mediated

settlement negotiations between the state and five plaintiffs from Hokkaido.

Whether to cover asymptomatic carriers was the most controversial point of the

settlement package.

If the government accepts the proposal, payment is expected to exceed ¥3

trillion, compared with the original plan of paying some ¥2 trillion for

hepatitis B sufferers, government sources said.

The government will have to consider how it will raise the financial resources

for the bigger-than-expected damages payment, as well as a special law to help

hepatitis B sufferers and carriers, they said.

A total of 621 people have filed damage suits since March 2008 with 10 district

courts. The plaintiffs argue the government should have stopped group

vaccinations in cases where needles were used repeatedly.

Last March, the Sapporo District Court was the first to urge the parties to

reach a settlement.

Issuing the first judicial view in the series of lawsuits over the infections

from group vaccinations, the court also called on the state to pay between ¥12.5

million and ¥36 million to those who have developed hepatitis B, depending on

their condition.

The plaintiffs and their lawyers will hold a meeting in Tokyo on Jan. 22 to make

an official decision on the proposal, and are expected to accept the offer,

saying it will cover all of the plaintiffs in the series of lawsuits.

The next round of negotiations will be held Feb. 15.

The government has so far denied carriers who do not show symptoms of the

disease the right to claim compensation on grounds that the statutory limit of

20 years has passed since the vaccinations took place, and instead proposed

offering subsidies for medical checkups.

Against this backdrop, the district court's determination had been the main

focus of the settlement negotiations, which began last May before similar suits

filed at other courts by victims of the vaccinations.

In presenting the proposal Tuesday, presiding Judge Shunichi Ishibashi said the

payments of ¥500,000 should be regarded as " expenses for past regular medical

checkups. "

Aside from settlement and subsidies for checkups, the court also urged the state

to make payments to individuals of up to ¥30,000 a year to cover transportation

and other expenses incurred in undergoing health checkups.

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