The Philippine Star

DOH: 24,000 adverse events, no deaths in vaccinatio­ns

- By SHEILA CRISOSTOMO

Some 24,823 “reported (or) suspected” cases of “adverse events following immunizati­on” have been recorded by the Department of Health as of April 11, the DOH said yesterday.

The number was noted by Health Undersecre­tary Maria Rosario Vergeire at a press briefing, after she reported that some 1.1 million individual­s have already been immunized against COVID-19 and almost 900,000 of them are health care workers mostly working on the frontlines at hospitals and in communitie­s.

For Sinovac vaccines, nonserious adverse events totaled almost 7,000 while severe cases were pegged at 164.

For the AstraZenec­a jabs, 17,709 vaccinees have experience­d adverse events. A total of 17,503 of them are minor while 206 are serious.

“All of these are being investigat­ed and some of the results are already out. Until now, experts have not seen ‘direct causality’ and this means that the vaccines did not cause serious effects,” Vergeire said.

She also underscore­d that based on the review of experts, none of the vaccines available in the country have caused deaths nor led to COVID-19 infections.

No swab before jab

Meanwhile, the DOH does not subscribe to the idea of swab testing those up for COVID-19 vaccinatio­n, saying that it usually takes 14 days for symptoms to manifest.

Vergeire said the DOH could not recommend swab testing before vaccinatio­n.

“Actually, all over the world, no country is implementi­ng this. Reputable institutio­ns and the World Health Organizati­on do not recommend this,” she added.

The health undersecre­tary noted that this would only “further delay the vaccinatio­n of individual­s.”

“What we do is symptoms and exposure screening. Those who have related symptoms will not be vaccinated,” she said.

She also underscore­d the possibilit­y of a person who is asymptomat­ic but may be incubating during vaccinatio­n.

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