The Borneo Post

Slovenia halts Johnson & Johnson vaccinatio­ns after woman’s death

-

LJUBLJANA: Slovenia announced it would no longer use the Johnson & Johnson Covid-19 vaccine after experts confirmed a 20-year-old died earlier this year because of the jab.

The Alpine EU member suspended vaccinatio­ns with Johnson & Johnson in September after the woman died of a brain haemorrhag­e and blood clots just days after getting vaccinated.

An expert commission confirmed in a report that the woman suffered a rare blood clotting condition, known as vaccine-induced immune thrombotic thrombocyt­openia.

“The temporary suspension of vaccinatio­ns with Janssen (produced by Johnson & Johnson), in force until now, will become permanent,” Health Minister Janez Poklukar told a news conference after the commission published its findings.

Vaccinatio­ns with AstraZenec­a, which uses viral vector technology like

Johnson & Johnson and has also been linked to rare blood clots, ‘most likely’ will also be discontinu­ed, according to Bojana Beovic, who heads the group advising the government on vaccinatio­ns.

The woman’s death in September reportedly was the country’s second case linked to Johnson & Johnson after the wife of a Slovenian diplomat based in Paris died in May, days after being vaccinated.

With over 16 million Johnson & Johnson’s vaccine doses being administra­ted in the European Union until the end of October, six deaths linked to the jab have been confirmed, according to the Slovenian authoritie­s.

Since September thousands have attended protests in Slovenia against coronaviru­s restrictio­ns and plans to make vaccinatio­n mandatory.

Some 54 per cent of the country’s two million people have been fully vaccinated, below the EU-wide rate of 68 per cent.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia