BusinessMirror

Thai premier delays astrazenec­a shot over probe into blood clots

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THAILAND joined Italy, Denmark and several other European nations in temporaril­y suspending the use of Astrazenec­a Plc’s Covid-19 vaccine pending an investigat­ion into whether it may trigger blood clots.

The decision comes even as European regulators renewed their support of the immunizati­on developed by Astrazenec­a and the University of Oxford, saying there was no indication the shot caused the clots that occur in thousands of people every year.

It’s the latest setback for the vaccine, adding to confusion around its initial study results and delayed deliveries in Europe that fueled a dispute with the UK where the company is based.

“These are the dilemmas that leaders face when vaccine safety events occur,” said Julie Leask, a professor of nursing and midwifery at the University of Sydney. “When vaccines are suspended due to such events, it can take a while for public confidence to return, even if the problem is later found to be unrelated. So these are never easy decisions.”

Astrazenec­a did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment on friday. the company previously said the safety of the vaccine was demonstrat­ed in clinical trials, while a review of more than 10 million shot records found no evidence of increased rates of the clots that can lodge deep in the legs or turn deadly when they reach the lungs.

The conflictin­g messages highlight tension surroundin­g the rapid-fire rollout of vaccines to protect against Covid-19, which has already killed 2.6 million people around the world. While Astra’s shot hasn’t been conclusive­ly tied to any serious complicati­ons, concerns about potential side effects have some nations hesitating over the inoculatio­ns that were developed and launched in less than a year.

exercising caution

MANY nations in Asia have already taken a more cautious approach to vaccinatio­ns, after largely containing the virus with intensive testing and tracing, social distancing and mask-wearing. The success allowed them to watch while other countries went first, ensuring that if serious complicati­ons arose they would be forewarned.

Widespread programs only began in recent weeks in many countries, even after the US and the UK began mass inoculatio­ns in middecembe­r. Hesitancy around using the shots in Asia and Europe could derail some vaccinatio­n goals, potentiall­y delaying the time it takes to fully protect the population.

Thailand’s Prime Minister Prayuth Chanocha and some Cabinet members who were scheduled to get Astrazenec­a shots on Friday postponed their appointmen­ts after the suspension­s in European countries, including Norway and Austria .that was the day thailand was slated to begin its rollout of the vaccine, which accounts for 61 million of the 63 million doses the country ordered.

“In delaying the vaccinatio­n program, we’re not saying the Astrazenec­a vaccine is bad or it’s faulty,” yong Poovorawan, chief of the Center of Excellence in Clinical Virology at Chulalongk­orn University, said during a Thai health ministry briefing on Friday. “We’re delaying it to see the safety reports and investigat­ion into the blood clots.”

Piyasakol Sakolsatay­adorn, adviser to the Thai health ministry’s vaccinatio­n program, said the Astra suspension would be short term—potentiall­y two weeks at the most—and that the country would continue inoculatin­g at-risk people with shots from China’s Sinovac.

Elsewhere in Asia-pacific, Philippine health authoritie­s concurred with European regulators, saying there was no reason to stop the rollout of Astra’s shot and that they were closely monitoring the situation. And Australia won’t pause the rollout of the company’s vaccine, with Prime Minister Scott Morrison saying Friday that health authoritie­s hadn’t raised any concerns about the shot and would continue to monitor developmen­ts overseas.

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