Close X
Monday, December 2, 2024
ADVT 
National

Blood clot risk bigger with COVID-19 than vaccines

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 19 Mar, 2021 05:19 PM
  • Blood clot risk bigger with COVID-19 than vaccines

The national advocacy group for patients with blood-clot disorders says there is a greater risk of getting blood clots from COVID-19 than there is from the vaccine.

Thrombosis Canada issued an updated statement on the risk of blood clots late Thursday, after the European Medicines Agency released its final report on the risk of blood clots after getting the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine.

The agency says there is no evidence of increased risk of blood clots from the vaccine, but added there is still not enough evidence to say if the vaccine played a role in a small number of clots in the vein that drains blood from the brain.

Thrombosis Canada, whose board is made up of physicians specializing in blood clots, says the incidence of those clots, known as cerebral sinus vein thrombosis, occurred at a rate between one in 250,000 to one in 500,000 people who received the vaccine.

By comparison, they say blood clots occurred in about one in 20 people hospitalized with COVID-19 and about one in 100 patients who have COVID-19 but were not hospitalized.

At least four European countries that halted AstraZeneca injections pending the review are resuming them, with France, Germany and Italy restarting the vaccinations today and Spain planning to do so next week.

MORE National ARTICLES

No place for 'far right' in Conservatives: O'Toole

No place for 'far right' in Conservatives: O'Toole
The unusual statement follows the riot on Capitol Hill, which U.S. President Donald Trump has been accused of inciting and which has since been held up as proof of the dangers posed by right-wing extremists to Western democracy.

No place for 'far right' in Conservatives: O'Toole

Alberta has legal case if Keystone killed: Kenney

Alberta has legal case if Keystone killed: Kenney
The premier says Alberta is getting legal advice in both Canada and the U.S. about seeking compensation if the project is scrapped.

Alberta has legal case if Keystone killed: Kenney

Ottawa clears Boeing 737 MAX for flight

Ottawa clears Boeing 737 MAX for flight
Monday's announcement caps a recertification process without precedent in the history of modern aviation.

Ottawa clears Boeing 737 MAX for flight

B.C. to phase out enhanced driver's licences

B.C. to phase out enhanced driver's licences
The enhanced driver's licence and enhanced identification card allowed the holder to enter the United States through land crossings or marine ports without needing to present a valid passport.

B.C. to phase out enhanced driver's licences

B.C. hospice refusing MAID must vacate premises

B.C. hospice refusing MAID must vacate premises
The statement comes a week after the society's board sent layoff notices to all clinical staff at the hospice before the cancellation of its service agreement.

B.C. hospice refusing MAID must vacate premises

University director resigns after holiday travel

University director resigns after holiday travel
In a statement on the school's website, Berman says his resignation was effective on Friday.

University director resigns after holiday travel