AstraZeneca has admitted for the first time that its Covid-19 vaccine may have side effects. The pharmaceutical company, forced to defend itself in…
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AstraZeneca he admitted for the first time that his Vaccine against the COVID-19 He can have side effects. The pharmaceutical company, forced to defend itself in court due to the millions of lawsuits brought by family members of alleged victims and by people who received the antidote to Coronavirus, explained that “for reasons still unknown the vaccine can cause thrombosis”.
The admission is written in black and white in the documents of the ongoing trial and have sparked a new uproar on the topic that had been recurring since 2021, when the first vaccines arrived on the market to fight the pandemic. According to some of the lawyers involved in the trial, the pharmaceutical company could be forced to compensate the victims up to 25 million dollars if it loses before the judge.
AstraZeneca forced to reveal “hidden data” on side effects, here’s what they are
AstraZeneca’s admission
AstraZeneca, which disputes those who define the product distributed in much of the world during the emergency as “defective”, acknowledged in a legal document from last February (but made public only in the last few hours) that its vaccine can “in very rare cases » cause a condition called thrombosis with thrombocytopenic syndrome or TTS, a condition characterized by blood clots and low platelet counts. AstraZeneca says the causal mechanism underlying TTS is not fully understood and that the condition can occur regardless of the vaccine.
The case of Camilla Canepa
In Italy, the case of Camilla Canepa, the 18-year-old who died in June 2021 after being vaccinated with AstraZeneca, had caused discussion. Recently the Genoa Prosecutor’s Office established that she could have “high probability of surviving” and placed five doctors from the emergency room in Lavagna, in Tigullio, under investigation, where the young woman had arrived on the evening of June 3 with symptoms of an adverse reaction to Vaccine. Camilla had been struck down by Vitt, the very rare cerebral thrombosis associated with low platelet levels and triggered by the adenoviral-based vaccine.
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