Los Angeles Times

Death of vaccine recipient prompts inquiry

Person in Placer County died hours after getting the shot. The cause is under investigat­ion.

- By Faith E. Pinho

The death of a person last week in Placer County who had recently received a COVID-19 vaccinatio­n is under investigat­ion by multiple agencies.

Officials from the county public health department and county Sheriff’s Office said in a statement that the person, who died Thursday, had tested positive for the coronaviru­s in late December and had been given a vaccine several hours before dying.

The county health department did not administer the vaccine and officials did not clarify in the statement whether the person had received the Moderna or Pfizer-BioNTech shot.

“Any reports surroundin­g the cause of death are premature, pending the outcome of the investigat­ion,” the Sheriff’s Office said on its Facebook page. “Our thoughts are with the family of the deceased.”

Placer County public health officials declined to respond to questions Tuesday.

“We cannot provide additional informatio­n pending the outcome of the investigat­ion, which includes state and federal partners,” health department spokesman Chris Gray-Garcia wrote in an email.

The Sheriff’s Office statement, which was posted Saturday on social media, elicited almost 3,000 comments, most slamming the agency for stoking fear.

Others praised officials for reporting the incident.

Sheriff’s officials defended the message in several comments, saying in one, “We are always transparen­t with the public, and share factual informatio­n in a timely manner. We cannot control how it’s spun/interprete­d.”

The U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion approved both the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines for emergency use after a well-establishe­d evaluation procedure for vaccine safety. No deaths have been linked to either vaccine.

Cases of anaphylaxi­s, a severe allergic reaction to the shots that can be lifethreat­ening, have been extremely rare, according to a report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

During the first three weeks of the Moderna vaccine’s rollout in the U.S., there were 2.5 cases of anaphylaxi­s for every 1 million doses administer­ed of the Moderna vaccine.

A similar analysis of the vaccine made by Pfizer and BioNTech found there were 11.1 cases of anaphylaxi­s for every 1 million doses during its first 10 days of administra­tion.

California’s Health and Human Services secretary, Dr. Mark Ghaly, said details of the Placer County case were “complex” and “worth further investigat­ion.”

In a briefing Monday, he said it was important to share publicly any lessons learned from the Placer County case and reactions in other vaccine recipients elsewhere across the country. Ghaly reiterated the safety of both vaccines in use in the U.S., which won endorsemen­t from the Western states’ scientific safety committee.

“These are safe vaccines [and] we’re watching them successful­ly administer­ed across the state, across the nation, across the globe,” Ghaly said.

“We are looking at this very closely and still stand behind the overwhelmi­ng data and evidence that these vaccines are safe.”

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