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France, Germany and Italy join other nations in suspending AstraZeneca vaccine



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France will stop administering AstraZeneca’s Covid-19 vaccine as a “precaution” pending a new assessment by the European Union’s medicines regulator, French President Emmanuel Macron said Monday, following a similar announcement by the German and Italian governments.

“The decision has been made … to suspend the use of the AstraZeneca vaccine as a precaution, hoping that we can resume its use quickly if the judgement of the EMA (European Medicines Agency) allows it,” Macron said at a press conference, adding that an EMA announcement was expected Tuesday afternoon. 

The German government said earlier on Monday that it was suspending the use of AstraZeneca’s coronavirus vaccine over reports of dangerous blood clots in connection with the shot. Germany’s health ministry said the decision was taken as a precaution and on the advice of the national vaccine regulator, the Paul Ehrlich Institute (PEI), which called for further investigation of the cases.

“After new reports of thromboses of the cerebral veins in connection with the vaccination in Germany and Europe, the PEI considers further investigations to be necessary,” said the health ministry.

“The European Medicines Agency will decide whether and how the new findings will affect the approval of the vaccine,” it added.

Shortly afterward, the Italian medicines authority said it was taking the same decision.

Several European countries  including Denmark, Norway, Ireland and the Netherlands  had already suspended usage of the shots, which were jointly developed with the University of Oxford. Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania and Luxembourg have also put the vaccine on hold.

Both AstraZeneca and Oxford have said there is no link between their vaccine and blood clotting.

The company had said the 15 incidences of deep vein thrombosis (DVT) and 22 events of pulmonary embolism reported among those given the vaccine was “much lower than would be expected to occur naturally in a general population”.

In its statement, the health ministry said the reported blood clots involved cerebral veins, but did not specify where or when the incidents occurred.

The European Medicines Agency and the World Health Organization have also said that available data do not suggest the vaccine caused the clots and that people should continue to be immunized.

According to the European Center for Disease Prevention and Control, Germany has received slightly over 3 million doses of the AstraZeneca vaccine and only used 1.35 million doses so far.

(FRANCE 24 with AP and AFP)



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