This story is from March 15, 2021
Explained: Why some countries have stopped use of Covid-19 AstraZeneca vaccine
NEW DELHI: Nearly a dozen countries including Germany, France and Italy have all temporarily suspended their use of
Here news agency Associated Press answers some of the questions surrounding the AstraZeneca vaccine.
What happened?
No. The European Medicines Agency says there is "no indication that vaccination has caused these conditions."
The EU regulator said the number of reports of blood clots in people who received the AstraZeneca vaccine was no higher than for those who hadn't gotten the shot.
So why did they stop the vaccination?
Has AstraZeneca run into other trouble?
The WHO and the EMA -- as well as regulators in several countries -- say people should continue to be immunised and that the small risks of getting vaccinated far outweighs any potential harm.
"The safety of the public will always come first," said Britain's drug regulator. "People should still go and get their COVID-19 vaccine when asked to do so."
AstraZeneca
's coronavirus vaccine after reports last week that some people in Denmark and Norway who got a dose developed blood clots. This despite the fact that there is no concret evidence that the shot was responsible.Here news agency Associated Press answers some of the questions surrounding the AstraZeneca vaccine.
What happened?
- Denmark was the first country to halt its use of the AstraZeneca Covid-19 vaccine last week after reports of blood clots in some people, including one person who developed multiple clots and died 10 days after receiving at least one dose. Danish health authorities said the suspension would last for at least two weeks while the cases were investigated, even as they noted that ``at present, it cannot be concluded whether there is a link between the vaccine and the blood clots.''
- Norway, Iceland, Bulgaria, Thailand, and Congo soon followed suit and imposed restriction on the vaccine's use.
- On Saturday, Norwegian authorities reported that four people under age 50 who had gotten the AstraZeneca vaccine had an unusually low number of blood platelets. That could lead to severe bleeding.
- Shortly afterward, Ireland and the Netherlands announced that they, too, were stopping their use of the AstraZeneca vaccine temporarily. Authorities in the Netherlands -- like those elsewhere -- said their suspension of the AstraZeneca vaccine was strictly precautionary.
- On Monday, Norwegian doctors announced that one of the people hospitalised after getting the AstraZeneca vaccine had died.
- After saying last week they would continue with the vaccine, German officials said Monday they would suspend its use after fresh reports of new problems, based on the advice from its medicines regulator.
- French President Emmanuel Macron said France too would suspend its use and Italy said soon after it too would stop using the shot. Spanish authorities said they were reviewing the situation.
No. The European Medicines Agency says there is "no indication that vaccination has caused these conditions."
The EU regulator said the number of reports of blood clots in people who received the AstraZeneca vaccine was no higher than for those who hadn't gotten the shot.
- In Britain, where 11 million doses of the AstraZeneca vaccine have been administered -- more than any other country -- there have been reports of about 11 people who developed blood clots after getting a shot. None were proven to have been caused by the vaccine.
- Some doctors pointed out that since vaccination campaigns started by giving doses to the most vulnerable people, those now being immunized are more likely to already have health problems. Experts say that could make it difficult to determine whether a vaccine shot is responsible.
- Blood clots that form in the arms, legs or elsewhere can sometimes break free and travel to the heart, brain or lungs, causing strokes, heart attacks or a deadly blockage of blood flow.
- Any time vaccines are rolled out widely, scientists expect some serious health issues and deaths to be reported -- simply because millions of people are receiving the shots and problems would be expected to occur randomly in a group so large.
- The vast majority of these end up not being connected to the vaccine, but because Covid-19 vaccines are still experimental, scientists must investigate every possibility that the shot could have some unforeseen side effects.
- The shots are considered experimental because the vaccines were only developed last year, so there is no long-term data for any of them.
Has AstraZeneca run into other trouble?
- The vaccine has been approved for use in adults in more than 50 countries and has been proven to be safe and effective in research done in Britain, Brazil and South Africa. But there have been concerns raised about how the vaccine data have been released, and some European leaders, including French President Emmanuel Macron, have questioned the vaccine's effectiveness.
- Britain first authorised the vaccine based on partial results that suggested the shots were about 70% effective. But those results were clouded by a manufacturing mistake that led some participants to get just a half dose in their first shot -- an error the researchers didn't immediately acknowledge. When it recommended the vaccine be licensed, the EMA estimated the vaccine's efficacy to be about 60%.
- The data on whether the vaccine protected older adults were also incomplete, leading some European countries to initially withhold the shot from older people.
- In the US, the Food and Drug Administration suspended a study in 30,000 Americans for an unusual six weeks, as frustrated regulators sought information about some possible side effects reported in Britain.
The WHO and the EMA -- as well as regulators in several countries -- say people should continue to be immunised and that the small risks of getting vaccinated far outweighs any potential harm.
"The safety of the public will always come first," said Britain's drug regulator. "People should still go and get their COVID-19 vaccine when asked to do so."
Top Comment
K
Kantichand rampuria
1359 days ago
It is not proved that the fatalities are because og this veccine.these nations have stopped temporarilyRead allPost comment
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