The Philippine Star

US pauses J&J jab

In blow to global immunizati­on drive

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WASHINGTON (AFP) – US health authoritie­s have recommende­d pausing the Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 shot over blood clot fears, with the company announcing it would delay its European rollout in a setback for global immunizati­on efforts.

Out of nearly seven million Americans who have so far received the single-dose vaccine, six women between age 18 and 48 developed a rare type of clot in the brain, officials said.

One later died, while another is in critical condition.

US Food and Drug Administra­tion scientist Peter Marks has said the disorder might be triggered by a rare immune response to the vaccine similar to that seen in a few hundred recipients of the AstraZenec­a jab in Europe.

”We have made the decision to proactivel­y delay the rollout of our vaccine in Europe,” J&J said.

US authoritie­s are conducting a probe which could result in tough regulatory choices, such as restrictin­g the J&J vaccine to older people.

People who have received the shot within the past three weeks were asked to report to their doctors if they experience­d severe headaches, abdominal pain, leg pain or shortness of breath.

The White House said it was confident there would be no “significan­t impact” on vaccinatio­n plans in the world’s hardest-hit country, where almost half of all adults have now received at least one dose.

But while J&J paused output, Pfizer said it increased production and could deliver 10 percent more doses than expected to the United States by the end of May.

That would bring its delivery by the end of next month to 220 million doses, its CEO Albert Bourla said, adding that it can also “supply the full 300 million agreed on... two weeks early.”

South Africa also suspended its J&J shot rollout, delaying an already sluggish campaign which has so far only administer­ed this vaccine.

But the European Medicines Agency said it was continuing to carry out its own investigat­ion, and Canada’s Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said his country still expected its first shipment of the shot by the end of April.

More than 800 million vaccine doses have now been administer­ed globally, according to an AFP tally.

The total number of virus deaths is approachin­g three million, as the World Health Organizati­on warned infections are rising exponentia­lly despite efforts aimed at stopping them.

Meanwhile, Muslims around the world began Ramadan on Tuesday, with many countries facing virus restrictio­ns.

Mosques in the world’s most populous Muslim-majority nation, Indonesia, are only be able to host people at a maximum of 50 percent capacity. Worshipper­s must wear masks and bring their own prayer mats.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Vials with a sticker reading ‘COVID-19 / Coronaviru­s Vaccine / Injection only’ and a medical syringe are seen in front of a displayed Johnson & Johnson logo in this illustrati­on taken on Oct. 31, 2020.
REUTERS Vials with a sticker reading ‘COVID-19 / Coronaviru­s Vaccine / Injection only’ and a medical syringe are seen in front of a displayed Johnson & Johnson logo in this illustrati­on taken on Oct. 31, 2020.

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