Ireland, Netherlands latest European countries to suspend AstraZeneca shots

5 nations have now halted rollouts of the vaccine over concerns about blood clots; company says no evidence of danger

A file photo taken on March 11, 2021 shows a vial of the AstraZeneca/Oxford COVID-19 vaccine in Paris on March 11, 2021 (JOEL SAGET / AFP)
A file photo taken on March 11, 2021 shows a vial of the AstraZeneca/Oxford COVID-19 vaccine in Paris on March 11, 2021 (JOEL SAGET / AFP)

DUBLIN, Ireland (AFP) — Ireland and the Netherlands on Sunday became the latest countries to suspend their rollouts of AstraZeneca shots over concerns about post-shot blood clots despite the firm insisting there was no risk, as most Italians were bracing for a new round of restrictions.

Vaccinations are a key tool to end the worst of a pandemic that has killed more than 2.6 million people since it emerged in China in late 2019.

So far more than 350 million doses have been doled out across the world, but countries including Denmark, Norway and Bulgaria suspended the rollout of shots from the Anglo/Swedish pharma giant this week after reports of blood clots developing in patients who had received the shot.

The World Health Organization, Europe’s medicines watchdog, governments and experts have stressed that no causal link has been established between the vaccine and blood clotting and insisted that the shot is safe.

A man receives the AstraZeneca vaccine during a COVID-19 vaccination campaign at the Nurse Isabel Zendal Hospital in Madrid, Spain, March 11, 2021. (AP Photo/Bernat Armangue)

An AstraZeneca spokesman said it had found no evidence of increased risk of blood clot conditions after analyzing reported cases from more than 17 million doses.

“In fact, the reported numbers of these types of events for COVID-19 Vaccine AstraZeneca are lower than the number that would have occurred naturally in the unvaccinated population,” said the spokesman.

AstraZeneca’s shot is among the cheapest available and forms a bulk of deliveries to poorer nations under the WHO-backed Covax initiative, which aims to ensure vaccines get to all parts of the globe.

We must have confidence

A spokesman for Ireland’s health ministry told AFP that the rollout had been “temporarily deferred” after the country’s advisory panel recommended a suspension because of concerns raised by Norwegian officials.

The Dutch health ministry similarly said it was suspending the rollout as a precaution.

Norwegian officials said on Saturday the country had reports of people “bleeding under the skin” and “severe cases of blood clots or brain hemorrhages in younger people” who had received the shot.

Jos Bieleveldt, 91, receives a COVID-19 vaccine in Apeldoorn, Netherlands, Tuesday, Jan. 26, 2021. (AP Photo/Peter Dejong)

AstraZeneca became embroiled in a bitter row with European leaders earlier in the year when it announced it would not be able to supply the number of doses it had promised.

Since then, European leaders have bitterly criticized the company and cast doubt on the vaccine’s efficacy while at the same time blocking some exports of doses to destinations outside the European Union.

French Prime Minister Jean Castex, however, defended his country’s decision to carry on with the AstraZeneca shot saying on Sunday France had found no reason to suspend the rollout.

“At this stage, we must have confidence in this vaccine,” he said, highlighting instead the danger of leaving large sections of the population unprotected from COVID.

France is facing a hospital crisis with intensive care beds in the Paris region running out and patients having to be taken to other parts of the country.

Vulnerable family

While France is hoping to avoid being plunged back into a national lockdown, neighboring Italy is set to reimpose restrictions across most of the nation on Monday — a year after it became the first European nation to face a major outbreak.

People wearing face mask to curb the spread of COVID-19, walk over a bridge in central Rome, Sunday, March 14, 2021. Italians across the country made the most of a last weekend of relative freedom, before a strict new lockdown is imposed to curtail rising coronavirus infection numbers. (AP Photo/Alessandra Tarantino)

Schools, restaurants, shops and museums will close with Health Minister Roberto Speranza saying he hoped the measures and vaccination program would allow restrictions to be relaxed in the second half of spring.

“Each dose of vaccine injected is a step in the direction of the way out of the crisis,” he said on Sunday.

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