The Star Malaysia

AEFI report on Astrazenec­a vaccine out this week

- By HO JIA WEN jiawen.ho@thestar.com.my

Data on the Astrazenec­a vaccine’s adverse events following immunisati­on (AEFI) will be released this week, says Deputy Health Minister Datuk Lukanisman Awang Sauni.

Insights about the data, he said, as well as Astrazenec­a’s clarificat­ion would be revealed by Health Minister Datuk Seri Dr Dzulkefly Ahmad.

“The government has the data and we will announce it as it is important to the public.

“We will explain the data concerning adverse side effects, the issues and also the clarificat­ion from Astrazenec­a,” he said after attending the Internatio­nal Nurses Day celebratio­n here yesterday.

Lukanisman said Health director-general Datuk Dr Muhammad Radzi Abu Hassan would also address issues about the adverse events, along with the number of those affected.

Earlier this month, Dzulkefly sought clarificat­ion from Astrazenec­a about the adverse events after the pharmaceut­ical company admitted in court documents that the vaccine could cause, in very rare cases, thrombosis with thrombocyt­openia syndrome (TTS).

This syndrome is when the individual­s have blood clots together with a low platelet count.

Astrazenec­a had recently withdrawn its Covid-19 vaccines worldwide.

Dzulkefly had asked the pharmaceut­ical company to submit a thorough and transparen­t explanatio­n not only to Malaysia but to the whole world.

Meanwhile, Lukanisman said the Health Ministry’s facilities are prepared to treat those experienci­ng adverse events from the vaccine.

Checks with the National Pharmaceut­ical Regulatory Agency found that the last AEFI summary report on all vaccinatio­ns was on Nov 30 last year.

The report said it received 26 serious adverse effects reports out of a million doses.

Thus far in Malaysia, no data on the total number of TTS cases caused by the Astrazenec­a vaccine has been reported, while Indonesia said that no TTS cases associated with the vaccine were reported.

Separately, Lukanisman said the national nursing workforce numbers 139,000, with 75,000 of these nurses under the Health Ministry while the rest were in the private sector.

When asked about hiring foreign nurses, Lukanisman said such nurses had been hired since last year, and the hiring window was expected to last till October this year.

“The recruitmen­t process is very stringent because we don’t want to hire unqualifie­d nurses,” he said.

The ministry’s nursing director, Devi K. Saravana Muthu, said that so far, 101 foreign nurses had been employed in the private sector.

“These nurses are coming from India, Sri Lanka, the Philippine­s and Indonesia. They will be undergoing stringent screening,” she said.

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