Manchester Evening News

Company says vaccine is safe

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ASTRAZENEC­A has insisted its coronaviru­s vaccine is safe, after concern around blood clots prompted Ireland to become the latest European country to suspend use of the jabs.

A review of available safety data in more than 17 million people who have been vaccinated across the UK and EU has shown no evidence of an increased risk, the pharmaceut­ical giant said.

People across the UK are still being urged to get their vaccine.

The number of cases of blood clots reported is lower than the hundreds of cases that would be expected among the general population, AstraZenec­a’s chief medical officer Ann Taylor said.

The statement came after Irish Minister for Health Stephen Donnelly said on Sunday that use of the Oxford/AstraZenec­a jab was being temporaril­y suspended as a ‘precaution­ary step’.

The decision followed reports of serious clotting in adults in Norway which left four people in hospital.

Several other European countries have temporaril­y suspended use of the Oxford/AstraZenec­a jabs.

The UK’s medicines regulator said available evidence does not suggest the vaccine is the cause of the blood clots.

Dr Phil Bryan, vaccines safety lead at the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency, said: “We are closely reviewing reports but given the large number of doses administer­ed, and the frequency at which blood clots can occur naturally, the evidence available does not suggest the vaccine is the cause.”

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