PEOPLE who decline a vaccine linked to rare blood clots “have a real risk of dying from Covid”, an expert has warned.
It comes after a study has found you’re no more likely to get a brain blood clot following an AstraZeneca jab than dying during a game of football.
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The AZ and Johnson and Johnson vaccines are understood to be behind hundreds of blood clot cases, some fatal.
However, the risk is so small and the benefit of potentially hundreds of thousands of lives saved from Covid outweigh any concerns.
Despite this, countries like Denmark have removed both jabs from its vaccine programme due to fears.
Prof Paul Hunter from the University of East Anglia, said: “To decline a vaccine today because it is the Oxford-AstraZeneca or Johnson & Johnson vaccine in the hope of being able to get another vaccine sometime later carries a real risk of dying from Covid-19 before being able to get a preferred vaccine.
“Those countries that delayed their own vaccination programmes at a time of high transmission rates by declining to use available Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccines should know that their decision will have contributed to an increase in the number of avoidable deaths from Covid-19.”
Blood clots related to vaccines have occurred in an rare and unfamiliar pattern.
They occur with low blood platelets, called thrombocytopenia, which has been described by regulators as “unusual”.
There have been 209 cases of the blood clot events of 21 million doses of the AZ jab until April 21, according to the MHRA, of which 41 led to death.
Based on these figures, the risk of dying from one of these blood clots in the days after a jab is 0.00018 per cent.
Meanwhile, around 16 people out of the eight million people vaccinated with the Johnson & Johnson vaccine in the US have developed a blood clot as of April 24.
Prof Hunter’s comments, in the British Medical Journal (BMJ), come following a study which sheds more light on the blood clot link.
Published in the BMJ today, it found that people who have had an AstraZeneca vaccine dose are at slightly more risk of a vein blood clot compared to the general population.
Researchers looked at 280,000 people aged 18-65 who received a first dose of the AZ jab in Denmark and Norway before it was suspended there.
There were 59 blood clots in the veins compared with 30 that would have been expected in the general population.
This is the equivalent of 11 excess blood clot events per 100,000 vaccines.
Brain blood clots, called cerebral venous thrombosis (CVST), were 20 times higher than expected.
Just over one case of CVST per 50,000 people were found in the study.
By comparison, the odds of dying during a game of football are 1.1 per 50,000 people according to a separate study in 2019 by Oxford University.
Today’s study did not measure blood clot events with low blood platelets – the rare type specifically linked with vaccines.