Health
Spain’s Basque Country Investigates Administration of Expired Vaccines
Health authorities in Spain’s Basque Country have launched an investigation after expired vaccines were administered to 253 people, including dozens of infants, over a two-month period within the region’s public health system. Officials confirmed that none of the affected individuals have reported adverse side effects.
The case came to light following a complaint filed by the EH Bildu parliamentary group to the Basque Parliament. Authorities have contacted all affected individuals, assuring families that the expired vaccines pose no health risks, and are arranging replacement doses to maintain full immunization coverage.
The vaccines involved were hexavalent doses, a key childhood immunization protecting against six diseases: diphtheria, tetanus, whooping cough, haemophilus influenzae type B, polio, and hepatitis B. These vaccines are routinely administered to infants under standard immunization schedules. According to the Basque health system, Osakidetza, the expired doses “do not entail any type of health impact or adverse effect.”
Systemic Oversight Failures
EH Bildu has criticized Osakidetza, claiming that some individuals received two expired doses and that the health system failed to monitor expiration dates or follow established protocols. In a legislative initiative in Álava, the party stated that “Osakidetza has not monitored the traceability of the expiry date and has not complied with the established procedures and protocols,” as reported by Basque public broadcaster EITB.
The expired vaccines were administered across 12 of the 13 integrated health organizations in the Basque Country, a region in northern Spain with its own autonomous health system.
Families Contacted for Revaccination
Alberto Martínez, the Basque Minister of Health from the Basque Nationalist Party (PNV), said in a statement that all cases have been identified and families are being directly informed. He added that health centers began contacting affected families on Wednesday to schedule replacement doses. Both Osakidetza and Spain’s national medicines agency, along with the Basque Vaccine Advisory Council and the vaccine manufacturer, recommend that all affected individuals receive revaccination to ensure full protection.
Second Vaccine Controversy in Recent Months
This incident follows a separate vaccine-related scandal in the region just four months ago. In September 2025, a trial began against a pediatric nurse in Santurtzi, Biscay province, accused of pretending to vaccinate children while discarding the vials. Prosecutors estimate that more than 400 children were left unvaccinated in 2021 and 2022 as a result.
Together, the two incidents have raised concerns about vaccine administration and oversight in the Basque health system. Authorities stress that while procedural failures are under investigation, the expired vaccines administered in the recent case pose no health risk to recipients.
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